WAITING LIST OF HEART OPERATIONS FOR CHILDREN
Key Words –
Superspeciality Departments in Public Hospitals,
Financial
viability, self-expanding Public Hospitals, Cardiology at K.E.M. hospital.
Cardio-vascular Dept. of K.E.M.
hospital has a long list of patients waiting for their surgical treatment. 288
children with congenital defect in their heart are waiting for months and years
and some 22 have died without treatment. Another 400 adults are also on the
waiting list, majority of them presumably for Coronary By-pass operation; most
of them could wait. The news was flashed
by Mumbai Mirror.
Perturbed by the news, the Municipal authorities are
running helter-skelter to get these children operated at the earliest and Dr. Shetty
from Bangalore and cardiac surgeons from major private hospitals in Mumbai are
offering to operate on them within a month, to finish the waiting list. But
very little attention is being given to find the root-cause for such delays and
to find a permanent solution. A few years later, Mumbai Mirror can again flash
the news of a new waiting list of children. The show will go on-- or can we stop the
show?
If the need in so great why can we not
expand the services? The fault lies in
the system.
a) It is the nasty “accounts department”
which needs to be convinced, before any costly
machine is purchased. Otherwise there is
no plausible reason why a 15 year old heart-lung machine could not be replaced
for 4 more years. The catastrophy has
arisen after 19 years when the old horse died. The deans are answerable, so are
the secretaries, but There Is No Answerbility for the account
Department. Half the hospital
problems will be solved, if the Accounts Dept.
was held answerable for undue delays in purchase of Vital Equipments.
b) Every patient pays around Rs.
60,000/- for the operation. Why ? it is Totally for the Consumables used during
the operation. Lot of costly tubes
(intra-vascular catheters) are inserted in various blood vessels as also to
drain urine/fluid collection in the chest, as also for monitoring. The total cost of these materials is the only
thing charged to the patient and that amounts to Rs.60,000/-. Everything else is totally free. That explains why the charges in private go
to 3 Lakhs. The surgeon charges 1 Lakh, the hospital charges 1.1/2 lakhs
for hospital services. No doubt, they
make some profit but that profit/excess money allows the hospital to expand the
Services. Wherever there is more demand
for the services that section expands. That
is What Does Not Happen in K.E.M. or any Municipal / Government Hospital.
The Continuous Clamour For
Everything Free Must Be Reviewed. It causes
stagnation. If these
patients were to pay just 10% of the hospital expenses, that would add just
Rs.15000/- more. The patients will be
paying Rs. 75000/- instead of Rs.60,000/-
as of now. With just 2 operations
a day and 300 working days in a year, each operation theater will collect
30,000 x 300 = Rs.90 lakhs. Within 5 years, the hospital can expand to have one
more operation theater and another 20
beds. Why is it not happening? Again
because of the “nasly accounts department” On behalf of BMC, the accounts department
Claims the money in general pool and the concerned department may not get a
paisa out of it. If only the dept. was allowed to claim of
least 80% of the amount collected by it for its expansion and /or maintenance,
a system of self- expansion will be
established and rising expectations of the
people will be met by the dept. expanding as per the needs of the
people.
What is worse is that senior
specialists in teaching hospitals are now allowed to do private practice. So, their interest in the department has
dwindled even more. It is better to go
out and earn thousands more than to struggle with the beurocracy and the
accounts department for improving the facilities in the dept.
A permanent solution is staring at us for
solving at us for solving such problems that who is listening?