Life-saving drugs, medical instruments crisis in Sindh hospitals worsens

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KARACHI: Public sector hospitals of Sindh province have been facing an acute shortage of life-saving medicines and disposable surgical instruments since the past six months due to poor planning and lethargy of concerned authorities from the Sindh Health Department.

The visiting patients at hospitals including, Civil Hospital Karachi (CHK), Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (JPMC), Sindh Government Lyari General Hospital (SGLGH), Sindh Government Hospital Liaquatabad (SGHL), National Institute of Child Health (NICH) and others are being asked to purchase medicines from their own pockets as public hospitals are facing an acute shortage of medicines and surgical items due to bureaucratic hurdles in the central procurement system for medicines.

Similarly, health facilities of Hyderabad, Larkana, Sukkur, Mirpurkhas, Shaheed Benazirabad and other cities are also facing a shortage of life-saving drugs. The medicines for patients who are suffering from chronic diseases like hepatitis C, tuberculosis (TB), and other systemic diseases are also not available in government sector hospitals.

The Sindh Health Department had introduced a centralised system in 2014-15 to purchase life-saving drugs for all the hospitals in order to control corruption and other irregularities in purchasing medicines. Since then, about 85 per cent medicines for all the public hospitals in Sindh are being procured through a centralised system, while 15 per cent are procured locally.

The shortage of medicines has further deepened in health facilities in all over the Sindh province as the supply of life-saving drugs has not started yet despite the passage of two quarters of the fiscal year 2018-19 due to delay in the tender process.  All the major hospitals of Sindh have been facing acute shortage of life-saving drugs and surgical items.

An administrative official at Civil Hospital Karachi told PPI that the provision of medicines and surgical instruments to 7,000 OPDs and 1,500 emergency patients on daily basis had become difficult for the administration. He said that crises of drugs and other items are worsening with each passing day.

He added that delay in the issuance of tenders for the central procurement of medicines as well as a rise in the value of the dollar were two major causes of the shortage of medicines as importers of surgical items and imported medical staff were reluctant to provide these supplies on older rates.

Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre Executive Director Dr Seemin Jamali said that a tender for the procurement of medicines and surgical items through the central procurement system should be issued in June or July every year instead of December to avoid such situations. She admitted that the provincial health sector had been facing a shortage of medicines due to the delay in the issuance of tenders for medicine procurements.

She added that the JMPC was acquiring drugs for needy patients from philanthropists and non-governmental organisations to overcome crises like situation.

The heads of others major hospitals of Karachi also confirmed that they had been facing an acute shortage of medicines and surgical items as the supply of life-saving drugs from health department did not start despite the passage of six months, compelling patients to buy the items from their own pockets.