Central teams, which were tasked to check preparedness of districts with a high load of COVID-19 cases, found that infection prevention control practices were not properly followed in several hospitals raising concerns over safety of healthcare workers, official sources said.
Six high-level multi-disciplinary teams were constituted by the Union Health Ministry to assist and review State health departments for proper implementation of cluster containment plans for large outbreaks and check hospital preparedness for COVID-19.
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Teams comprising experts from the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), AIIMS and ICMR, among others visitedthe States, including Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Telangana and Tamil Nadu which have high case load districts.
“They have observed that infection prevention control practices were not being followed properly during sample collection and treatment of confirmed cases raising concerns over the possibility of healthcare workers getting infected and leading to further transmission,” the sources said.
The teams have recommended that such infection prevention control guidelines should be strictly followed in hospital settings. Several healthcare workers including doctors and nurses have been infected by COVID-19 across the country.
Asked about the number of infected healthcare personnel, an official said no such centralised data has been maintained.
The Central teams have also advised the States to follow laid down procedures of sample collection and transfer to testing labs maintaining the cold chain. “It was observed that the cold chain was not being followed at some cases, which may lead to incorrect test results,” the sources said.
Explaining the cold chain, the sources said samples and specimens, and even drugs and reagents are needed to be stored at a particular temperature. Even when they are transported, that temperature level has to be maintained so that they do not degrade.
The teams have also recommended the need for deploying more field staff for house-to-house survey in containment zones as well as strengthening of passive surveillance in buffer zones so that asymptomatic cases are not missed out, and a separate triage area in hospitals for segregation of the mild, moderate and severe patients of COVID-19 infection, which they said, were not followed in many places.
The groups also called for training of healthcare workers in IPC practices and clinical management of mild, moderate and severe infections as per the national clinical guidelines.
Interaction with many of them revealed that they are unaware of the guidelines to be followed while handling a COVID-19 patient and this is a “serious concern,” the sources said.
As many as 15 places including Delhi, Mumbai and Ahmedabad have been identified as “high case load” by the government.
Out of these 15, seven districts show particularly high case volumes, like Hyderabad (Telangana), Pune (Maharashtra), Jaipur (Rajasthan), Indore (Madhya Pradesh), Ahmedabad (Gujarat), Mumbai (Maharashtra) and Delhi.