6,000 more beds for COVID patients in valley

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Meant to isolate asymptomatic cases Not enough: Experts Kathmandu, August 27 The government has decided to set up 6,000 beds in Kathmandu
valley to isolate asymptomatic COVID-19 patients, but health experts say that the number is inadequate, as the number of COVID-19 cases was
rising sharply in the valley. Assistant Spokesperson for the Ministry of Health and Population Samir Kumar Adhikari told THT that the 6,000
isolation beds the government wanted to set up in Kathmandu valley soon would be enough to deal with the rising number of cases for a few
months
He said if the number of patients continued to surge, then the government would arrange more isolation beds
The ministry hopes that most asymptomatic patients can stay in self-isolation at their home
But that will depend on their neighbours as well. In some places, neighbours have made lives of COVID patients difficult
Neighbours should not stigmatise COVID patients, he added. According to Adhikari, the national COVID-19 positivity rate is between five and
six per cent, with one exception mdash; 16.5 per cent on July 3. The World Health Organisation has recommended certain measures for
positivity rate below 12 per cent and a different set of measures for the rate exceeding 12 per cent
Our COVID-19 transmission rate is below 12 per cent
This means the current measures will continue to be enforced, he said. According to Adhikari, 80 per cent COVID cases are asymptomatic and
can recover in isolation, while 20 per cent of the patients are symptomatic and need to be hospitalised
Fifteen per cent patients need intensive care, while five per cent need ventilator support. Critical Care expert Subhas Acharya said 6,000
isolation beds would be occupied within a month if the number of COVID patients rose by 200 a day in Kathmandu valley, but if the number
rose by 500 a day, 6,000 beds would be occupied within 15 days even if 50 per cent of the infected people isolate themselves at
home. Acharya alleged that the government had no concrete plan to fight the pandemic. No intensive care unit is vacant in government
hospitals in Kathmandu
If a patient needs to be admitted to ICU, s/he needs to call dozens of hospitals to check if they have ICU beds available, Acharya said
He added that in Kathmandu not more than two private hospitals had admitted patients to ICU. Acharya said the government recently mandated
private hospitals to allot 20 per cent of their beds to COVID patients, but the government did not mention about ICU beds as a result of
which private hospitals were not allotting ICUs for COVID patients. Poor and middle class families cannot afford treatment at private
hospitals and government hospitals do not have any vacant ICU, he added. Lalitpur Chief District Officer Narayan Prasad Bhatta told THT that
the government had decided to set up quarantine centres with a capacity of 6,000 beds and the local administrations were identifying private
and government buildings, hostels and hotels that could be used as quarantine centres
Bhatta said local municipalities and metropolis were also setting up quarantine and isolation centres. Kathmandu Chief District Officer
Janak Raj Dahal said government agencies and local governments were trying their best to utilise the lockdown period to increase
preparedness against COVID, but he was concerned whether those agencies would be able to have the required number of isolation beds and
other infrastructure ready during the current lockdown. A version of this article appears in e-paper on August 28, 2020, of The Himalayan
Times. The post 6,000 more beds for COVID patients in valley appeared first on The Himalayan Times.