Diwali Burn Crisis: 89 Injured Flood Chennai Hospital Amid Celebrations

Tamil Nadu Health Minister Ma Subramanian inspected the special burn ward at Kilpauk Medical College Hospital in Chennai. The minister revealed that 89 burn injury patients have been admitted since yesterday, with 48 in serious condition. During his inspection, he appealed to people to wear cotton clothes and burst crackers in open spaces during Diwali celebrations. Subramanian also highlighted the health department's successful monsoon preparedness measures that prevented hospital waterlogging this year.

Key Points: Tamil Nadu Health Minister Inspects Kilpauk Medical College Burn Ward

  • 48 patients seriously injured with eight requiring surgery procedures
  • Minister appeals for cotton clothes during Diwali celebrations
  • Special monsoon measures prevent hospital waterlogging this year
  • Health department holds meetings for Northeast monsoon preparedness
2 min read

89 injured patients have come since yesterday: Tamil Nadu Health Minister inspects special burn ward at Kilpauk Medical College

89 burn patients treated at Kilpauk Medical College amid Diwali celebrations. Health Minister Ma Subramanian issues safety warnings and inspects monsoon preparedness.

"We have formed a special burn ward... 89 injured patients have come since yesterday - Ma Subramanian"

Chennai, October 20

Tamil Nadu Health Minister Ma Subramanian on Monday carried out inspections at the special burn ward of the Kilpauk Medical College Hospital in Chennai, and said that 89 patients have come here since yesterday.

"We have formed a special burn ward in Kilpauk Medical College Hospital. As of now there are 89 injured patients who have come since yesterday, of whom 48 are seriously injured and others have been discharged. Among those who have been seriously injured, eight of them will get surgery," the Tamil Nadu Health Minister said.

Amid Diwali celebrations, Subramanian appealed to the people to burst crackers in the open and wear cotton clothes.

"I appeal to people to burst crackers in the open, wearing cotton and not silk or nylon clothes," he said.

Speaking on preparedness for the Northeast monsoon by the Tamil Nadu health department, Subramanian said that meetings have been organised to discuss precautionary measures.

"Meetings held on precautionary measure. Wherever waterlogging occurred due to heavy rains in health centres and hospitals last year, we have monitored and taken steps this year," the minister said.

Subramanian informed that Royapettah Hospital witnessed waterlogging last year due to the ongoing metro work in the area. However, he said, no waterlogging occurred this time. He stated that waterlogging at the Thoothukudi Government Medical College Hospital was also prevented this year.

"Last year in Royapettah Hospital, waterlogging happened due to ongoing metro work and this year, we have made sure no waterlogging occurred. In Thoothukudi Government Medical College Hospital last year, water entered the hospital. However, we placed sandbags this year amid heavy rainfall, which prevented waterlogging," he added.

On the occasion of Diwali, Subramanian distributed sweets to doctors and healthcare workers during his inspection at Kilpauk Medical College Hospital.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see the government being proactive with the special burn ward. But why do we need these warnings every year? People should be more responsible during festivals. Safety first always!
S
Sarah B
Appreciate the minister distributing sweets to healthcare workers. They work tirelessly during festivals when everyone else is celebrating. True heroes! 🙏
A
Arjun K
The monsoon preparedness is commendable. Last year's flooding in hospitals was a nightmare for patients. Good to see preventive measures being taken seriously this time.
M
Michael C
89 patients in one day is alarming. While I appreciate the government's efforts, maybe we need stricter regulations on firecracker sales and better public awareness campaigns.
K
Kavya N
As someone who celebrated Diwali safely with family, I urge everyone to follow safety guidelines. The festival is about lights and happiness, not hospital visits. Stay safe everyone! 🪔

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