KARACHI, June 12: Sindh Health Minister Dr Saghir Ahmad has said that a protocol is being developed to avert thefts and interchanges of newborns at government hospitals, in addition to improving the overall security system there.

Talking to newsmen at his office on Thursday, the health minister said that the recent theft of a newborn girl in the Sindh Government Hospital, New Karachi, and her recovery through the intervention of the provincial home minister had provided enough room for the health affairs managers in the government, doctors and paramedical staff to rethink the existing workings of the gynaecology and children wards at Sindh government hospitals.

“There is a need to develop a fool-proof mechanism under which a newborn, after delivery, is handed over to the mother or blood relatives only by the doctor conducting the delivery, only after proper verification and identification. In this regard directives are being issued to all medical superintendents of hospitals and executive district officers (health),” he said.

Pointing to the stolen and recovered newborn girl, who slept comfortably in her mother’s lap during his talk with the media, Dr Ahmad said that a crisis had been resolved after efforts of 42 hours, but still a lot of things remained to be done on the administrative and disciplinary sides.

The lady health visitor employed at the New Karachi hospital who helped in the abduction of the baby had been taken into custody by police, while another two junior staffers and a woman, who had taken away the baby from the hospital, are also being interrogated by police.

“Other senior staff concerned, guilty of negligence, will also have to face disciplinary actions if the inquiry committee of the health department instituted to report into the theft case recommended so,” the minister added.

He said that no paramedical staff or other non-concerned person would be allowed to conduct deliveries, except the doctor concerned. No child below the age of four would be allowed to enter the gynaecology ward or in the labour room of a hospital.

He further said that a doctor who would perform a delivery should introduce himself or herself to the patient and her attendant first and would also ensure that proper identification band was tied around the arm of the newborn in the presence of the mother for identification, while security should also be placed at all gynaecology wards not to allow shifting of any newborn without a baby pass issued by the doctor concerned.

About the woman abductor of the child, the minister said that things got complicated when she imposed a fake pregnancy on herself. However, some initial tests had revealed that she was never pregnant and the recovered baby had rightly been handed over to the genuine parents, the minister added.

DSP Amir Hameed of the Anti-violent Crime Unit said that there was no gang behind the New Karachi hospital incident and, based on what he had assessed, he could say that the abductor, Mehwish, was also not a professional baby-grabber.

ADP budget

The health minister also talked about the budget of his department and expressed the hope that the annual development programme allocations for 2008-09 would be enhanced to Rs2,850 million. In the provincial budget of 2007-08, the ADP allocations was around Rs1,250 million, he said, adding that the government was focusing on the upgrade of emergency/trauma and casualty centres at teaching and district hospitals.

ADP schemes for the establishment of a 10-bed isolation ward in all teaching hospitals of the province, establishment of burns centres at the medical college hospitals in Larkana and Sukkur, establishment of ICUs in the surgical, medical, paediatrics, gynaecology and orthopaedics wards of all teaching hospitals of Sindh, upgrade of the pathological laboratory at the Civil Hospital Karachi and establishment of an institute of skin diseases at Larkana are also being included in the new budget.

He said efforts were also being made to get more SNEs (sanctioned new expenditures) approved by the government regarding the appointments of doctors and paramedical staff and other junior grade employees at hospitals and health-care units across the province.

Opinion

Editorial

Closed doors
08 Jan, 2025

Closed doors

SOMETHING is afoot in Islamabad, but few seem willing to venture a guess about what is really going on. It is ...
Debt burden
08 Jan, 2025

Debt burden

THE federal government’s total debt stock soared by above 11pc year-over-year to Rs70.4tr at the end of November,...
GB power crisis
08 Jan, 2025

GB power crisis

MASS protests are not a novelty in Pakistan, and when the state refuses to listen through the available channels —...
Fragile peace
Updated 07 Jan, 2025

Fragile peace

Those who have lost loved ones, as well as those whose property has been destroyed in the clashes, must get justice.
Captive power cut
07 Jan, 2025

Captive power cut

THE IMF’s refusal to relax its demand for discontinuation of massively subsidised gas supplies to mostly...
National embarrassment
Updated 07 Jan, 2025

National embarrassment

The global eradication of polio is within reach and Pakistan has no excuse to remain an outlier.