weary flake
2020-06-30 20:27:45 UTC
[Did this Urban Legend happen a few days ago?]
https://nypost.com/2020/06/23/man-died-at-hospital-after-relatives-unplugged-ventilator-for-air-conditioner/
The relatives of a suspected COVID-19 patient in India allegedly
unplugged his ventilator to use an air conditioner at a
sweltering hospital, killing him, according to reports.
The unidentified patient, a 40-year-old man at Maharao Bhimsingh
Hospital in Kota in northern India, was admitted into an ICU unit
on June 13 as doctors believed he had contracted the bug, the
Indian Express reports.
Two days later, the man was transferred to an isolation ward as a
safety precaution since another ICU patient had tested positive
for coronavirus, the newspaper reports.
The man’s relatives then took an air conditioner to the hospital
– as daytime temps reportedly topped out at 106 degrees — and
allegedly unplugged the ventilator after not finding an open
socket to cool down the room, according to the report.
Hospital staffers had deactivated air conditioners in the unit in
an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19, Vice News reports.
The ventilator had a backup battery, but the man’s relatives
didn’t tell doctors or nurses that they unplugged it, the medical
superintendent at the government-run hospital told the outlet.
An investigation into the incident is now underway, Dr. Navin
Saxena said.
“We have set up a committee with the deputy superintendent of the
hospital, nursing superintendent, isolation ward staff and chief
medical officer to file a report that details what happened,”
Saxena told Vice News.
The ventilator’s battery reportedly ran out of power almost 30
minutes after being unplugged, sending the man’s family scurrying
for help from staffers who gave him CPR but could not revive him.
The man’s cause of death will also be included in the hospital’s
report. He tested negative for COVID-19 following his death,
Saxena said.
The temperature in Kota on June 15 reached 106 degrees. No formal
complaint had been filed with local police in connection with the
incident, Vice News reports.
https://nypost.com/2020/06/23/man-died-at-hospital-after-relatives-unplugged-ventilator-for-air-conditioner/
The relatives of a suspected COVID-19 patient in India allegedly
unplugged his ventilator to use an air conditioner at a
sweltering hospital, killing him, according to reports.
The unidentified patient, a 40-year-old man at Maharao Bhimsingh
Hospital in Kota in northern India, was admitted into an ICU unit
on June 13 as doctors believed he had contracted the bug, the
Indian Express reports.
Two days later, the man was transferred to an isolation ward as a
safety precaution since another ICU patient had tested positive
for coronavirus, the newspaper reports.
The man’s relatives then took an air conditioner to the hospital
– as daytime temps reportedly topped out at 106 degrees — and
allegedly unplugged the ventilator after not finding an open
socket to cool down the room, according to the report.
Hospital staffers had deactivated air conditioners in the unit in
an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19, Vice News reports.
The ventilator had a backup battery, but the man’s relatives
didn’t tell doctors or nurses that they unplugged it, the medical
superintendent at the government-run hospital told the outlet.
An investigation into the incident is now underway, Dr. Navin
Saxena said.
“We have set up a committee with the deputy superintendent of the
hospital, nursing superintendent, isolation ward staff and chief
medical officer to file a report that details what happened,”
Saxena told Vice News.
The ventilator’s battery reportedly ran out of power almost 30
minutes after being unplugged, sending the man’s family scurrying
for help from staffers who gave him CPR but could not revive him.
The man’s cause of death will also be included in the hospital’s
report. He tested negative for COVID-19 following his death,
Saxena said.
The temperature in Kota on June 15 reached 106 degrees. No formal
complaint had been filed with local police in connection with the
incident, Vice News reports.