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Regular-article-logo Saturday, 27 April 2024

MGM runs out of rabies shots

It is a big worry for people from poor backgrounds who go to the state-run institution with dog bites

Kumud Jenamani Jamshedpur Published 11.04.19, 07:05 PM
The pharmacy at MGM hospital in Jamshedpur on Thursday.

The pharmacy at MGM hospital in Jamshedpur on Thursday. (Animesh Sengupta)

When Akash Gope, 14, bitten by a stray dog near his home in Bhaktinagar, Burmamines, reached state-run MGM hospital in Sakchi on Thursday morning, he just received an anti-tetanus serum, not anti-rabies shots. His father Janardhan was told to buy anti-rabies injections from a pharmacy. Confessing it was beyond his means, the poor private security guard took his son to the state-run Sadar Hospital in Khasmahal, 8km from the Sakchi hospital.

MGM hospital has run out of anti-rabies shots, posing a big worry for people from poor backgrounds who go to the state-run institution with dog bites. A vial of anti-rabies injection cost Rs 315 in the market and a dog-bite victim needs a minimum of five such shots after the preliminary anti-tetanus serum. In state-run MGM hospital, the shots come free of cost.

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As per data, on an average 50 dog bite cases come to the MGM hospital every month, but since the past two months there is no stock of anti-rabies injection.

As a result, MGM doctors on emergency duty just administer the anti-tetanus shot to a dog-bite victim and ask him or those accompanying him to either buy the injection from the market or go to Sadar Hospital at Khasmahal where there is a stock of about 150 vials as of Thursday.

Asked why this state of affairs, deputy superintendent of MGM Medical College and Hospital Nakul Prasad Chaudhury confirmed the stock of anti-rabies injection had been exhausted.

“We get a fresh stock of anti-rabies injections every three months, but we have not got fresh stocks since the past two months. We are left with instructing dog-bite patients either to buy the injection or go to Sadar Hospital,” admitted Chaudhury. “We have asked the state health department for a fresh stock of anti-rabies injections. Let’s see,” he added.

Till stocks arrive, poor patients or their family members would have to head to Khasmahal. Shanti Devi, a resident of Laxminagar slum in Telco, who took her 11-year-old boy Sonu, who was bitten by a dog on Wednesday, to MGM hospital and then Sadar Hospital in Khasmahal, said it was a difficult job with a crying child. “From Telco, I came to MGM hospital in Sakchi, then went to Khasmahal and then back home in Telco. It’s a terrible ordeal for a frightened child,” she said.

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