Perilous
Times
17 infants die in 48 hours at 1 Indian hospital
NEW DELHI — At least 17 infants have died in the last 48 hours at
a government-run hospital in eastern India and the state is
investigating, media reported Thursday.
Television news channels showed images of weeping and wailing
parents outside the B.C. Roy Hospital for Children in Kolkata, the
capital of West Bengal.
The hospital head D. Pal told Press Trust of India the babies were
either premature, suffering from septicemia or had low birth
weight problems. He denied any negligence by the hospital.
PTI quoted the state's top elected official, Mamata Banerjee, as
saying her government had ordered an investigation.
In 2006, 22 infants died in three days at the same hospital
because of prematurity or acute forms of either meningitis,
encephalitis or septicemia, the hospital said at the time.
State-run hospitals in India are often overcrowded and
ill-equipped to manage the large number of patients that come to
them desperate for medical care.
India's infant mortality rate is higher than the world average. It
ranks 50th of 222 countries and territories, with about 48 deaths
per 1,000 live births estimated this year, according to the CIA
World Factbook.