Mon, 25 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 25, 2026 · 14:56
Kerala News Updated May 25, 2026

Kerala Health Minister Orders Strict Action on Hospital Lapses Ahead of Monsoon

Kerala Health Minister K Muraleedharan reviewed hospital preparedness ahead of the monsoon season, directing authorities to ensure adequate medicine stocks and strict surgical protocols. He addressed alleged treatment lapses at Kozhencherry and Chirayinkeezhu hospitals, promising action against erring doctors. The minister also announced a state-level cleanliness drive in hospitals on the 30th to improve hygiene standards. He emphasized not blaming the previous administration while moving forward with necessary reforms.

Keralam Health Minister reviews hospital preparedness ahead of monsoon, orders strict action on treatment lapses

Thiruvananthapuram, May 25

Keralam Health, Food Safety and Devaswom Minister K Muraleedharan on Monday reviewed hospital preparedness across the state ahead of the monsoon season, directing authorities to ensure adequate medicine stocks, improved cleanliness, and strict adherence to surgical protocols to prevent patient hardship.

While addressing a press conference here, the minister said that "he does not intend to blame the previous administration", while highlighting that he is reviewing reports on alleged treatment lapses in various hospitals.

"I held discussions with officials and reviewed the pre-monsoon cleaning activities. The discussions focused on how to move forward after taking charge, and I do not intend to blame the previous administration," the minister said, adding that he has begun reviewing hospital systems within four days of assuming office.

On monsoon-related health preparedness, the minister directed District Medical Officers (DMO), Directorate of Medical Education (DME) and Directorate of Health Services (DHS) to ensure uninterrupted availability of essential medicines in hospitals.

"Adequate stock of medicines must be maintained and patients should not suffer due to shortages," he said.

He also stressed the need for strict compliance with surgical protocols. "Strict surgical protocols must be followed during surgeries. Doctors performing surgeries should be provided with all necessary facilities, and the anaesthesia department must extend proper support," he added.

Speaking about alleged lapses in treatment in various instances during these few months, the minister said that they are "ready to accept criticism," while calling on certain media outlets not to spread false news.

"Regarding the treatment lapse at Kozhencherry District Hospital, the report mentions whether the patient had sought treatment elsewhere after 2023. We are not taking that at face value," Muraleedharan said.

The case pertains to allegations that a broken syringe needle remained inside a 62-year-old woman's body for nearly a year after treatment at the hospital.

Referring to another incident at Chirayinkeezhu hospital, where a father alleged that his son did not receive proper treatment after a snakebite, the minister said action would be taken against the doctor concerned.

"A doctor has committed an error and action will be taken," he said.

Regarding the Harshina treatment lapse issue, discussions will be held with the Chief Minister, as the minister added, "If there is a possibility of providing employment, it will be considered. Statements will also be recorded from the person who administered the injection that day. The DMO has been asked to submit a report after including those details as well."

He said that while officials have been asked to submit reports for each case, not all of them "will be accepted immediately upon receipt, and some findings are not convincing to me."

The minister also announced a state-level cleanliness drive in hospitals on the 30th, aimed at improving hygiene standards across public healthcare institutions.

The government aims to end the practice of patients lying on hospital floors by making the required arrangements, with additional posts to be created anywhere there is a shortage of doctors.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Thank you Minister for taking prompt action! but why did it take a broken syringe case for things to be noticed? We need systemic changes not just post-incident reactions. @KeralaHealth please focus on preventive measures too 🏥

Vikram M

I'm happy he isn't blaming the previous government for everything - that's mature. But actions speak louder than words. Let's see if the cleanliness drive on 30th yields real change. Patients deserve dignity not floors!

Michael C

Having worked in public health in India, I appreciate the transparency about not accepting reports at face value. But the broken needle case is alarming. Hope the investigation is thorough and the victim gets justice. Patient safety can't be compromised.

Rahul R

Finally some proactive steps! But I'm skeptical about "additional posts" creation - in Kerala we've seen many promises but ground reality is different. Hope the DMO reports are genuinely scrutinized. And yes, media should avoid spreading panic 🤞

Kavya N

As someone from Kozhencherry, I know the hospital situation there. The minister's cautious approach on that case is wise - need to verify if patient went elsewhere. But also, basic hygiene and doctor availability need immediate attention 🙏

David E

Respectful criticism: Good initiative on

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked