Kerala Hospital Crisis: Why Patients Lie on Floor Amid Overcrowding

Kerala's Health Minister is defending the practice of treating patients on hospital floors. She says medical colleges are overwhelmed with more patients than they can accommodate. The controversy erupted after a senior doctor criticized what he called primitive treatment conditions. This comes amid ongoing political pressure and a recent patient death that highlighted systemic issues.

Key Points: Kerala Health Minister Defends Floor Treatment Amid Bed Shortage

  • Minister attributes floor treatment to overwhelming patient inflow in medical colleges
  • Private hospitals transferring patients strain government hospital resources
  • Doctor Chirakkal criticizes primitive treatment conditions after patient death
  • Opposition leader Satheesan calls Health Minister ineffective administrator
2 min read

Kerala Health Minister defends treating patients lying on the floor

Kerala Health Minister Veena George addresses patient floor treatment controversy at Thiruvananthapuram Medical College, citing overcrowding and bed shortages.

"Not a single patient is sent back. There are people who abandon patients and leave - Veena George"

Thiruvananthapuram, Nov 14

Kerala Health Minister Veena George on Friday defended the strong criticism that erupted over patients being treated on the floor at the Thiruvananthapuram Medical College Hospital and attributed it to overcrowding and shortage of beds in medical colleges.

The Minister said the situation was a direct result of overwhelming patient inflow and insisted that no patient is ever denied treatment, even if it means treating them on the floor.

According to her, medical colleges across Kerala are receiving far more patients than they can physically accommodate.

“We are continuously working to improve infrastructure. Not a single patient is sent back. There are people who abandon patients and leave, such individuals will be moved to safe centres,” she said.

Veena George emphasised the need for strict compliance with referral protocols.

“Everyone should not be sent to medical colleges. Patients must be referred only after ensuring bed availability,” she said, adding that private hospitals frequently transfer large numbers of patients to government medical colleges, further straining resources.

The Minister declined to respond to the sharp remarks made by senior doctor Haris Chirakkal, saying, “Ask him directly.”

Her remarks came after Dr Chirakkal criticised the hospital for what he termed “primitive” treatment conditions, especially the practice of keeping patients on the floor.

Dr Chirakkal’s criticism followed the recent death of Venu, a heart patient who allegedly did not receive timely treatment and was made to lie on the hospital floor.

“How can anyone be treated on the ground? What is the point of starting medical colleges across the State if this is the standard of care?” he asked.

He said the situation had pushed many patients to rely on private hospitals and asserted that the conditions were no better than those seen in 1986.

Dr Chirakkal also highlighted systemic issues, including frequent transfers of doctors “just to make up numbers,” and urged the government to address fundamental gaps urgently.

His earlier disclosure about equipment shortages in the urology department had already placed the Health Department under pressure.

For long the Leader of Opposition V.D.Satheesan has been going hammer and tongs against Health Minister Veena George and has termed her an ineffective administrator and has attributed the pitfalls in the health sector due to it.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As someone from Kerala, I've seen this firsthand. Medical colleges are overwhelmed because everyone rushes there for minor issues. The minister is right about referral protocols - primary health centers should handle basic cases. But still, no patient deserves to be on the floor.
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David E
While the situation is unfortunate, at least they're not turning patients away. Many states have much worse conditions. Kerala still has one of India's best healthcare systems. The government should focus on infrastructure expansion rather than political blame games.
S
Sneha F
Dr. Chirakkal is absolutely right! My uncle had to wait 8 hours on a bench in the same hospital last month. The frequent transfer of doctors is disrupting continuity of care. The system needs complete overhaul, not temporary fixes.
A
Arjun K
Both sides have valid points. Overcrowding is real, but so is the need for dignity in healthcare. Maybe the government can create temporary medical facilities during peak seasons? Also, private hospitals should be regulated from dumping patients on government hospitals.
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Meera T
The death of Venu is tragic and completely unacceptable. When will our leaders understand that healthcare is a basic right? Instead of defending the situation, the minister should take responsibility and fix it. Kerala deserves better! 🙏

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