Sindh's Dengue Crisis: How Government Neglect Fueled a Health Catastrophe

The dengue outbreak in Hyderabad has become a full-blown health catastrophe with 16 confirmed deaths. Activists are demanding an immediate health emergency declaration from the Sindh government. They accuse health authorities of concealing real infection numbers while hospitals face critical medicine shortages. The situation has escalated to the point where legal action against responsible officials is being planned.

Key Points: Sindh Government Negligence Turns Dengue Outbreak Deadly

  • 16 confirmed deaths from dengue with thousands infected across Hyderabad
  • Severe medicine shortages and inadequate healthcare infrastructure in government hospitals
  • Private hospitals accused of profiteering while critical data remains concealed
  • Activists planning legal action against officials for gross negligence and corruption
2 min read

Sindh government's criminal negligence turns dengue outbreak into a nationwide health catastrophe

Activists demand health emergency as dengue claims 16 lives in Hyderabad, accusing officials of concealing data and hospitals of exploitation amid critical shortages.

"dengue has turned deadlier than Covid-19 - Imran Suharwardy"

Sindh, October 30

As dengue fever continues to claim lives in Hyderabad, social activists have demanded that the Sindh government declare an immediate health emergency and take decisive measures to contain the outbreak. The activists have urged the authorities to establish a dedicated dengue task force and provide free testing facilities at both public and private hospitals, as reported by The Express Tribune.

According to The Express Tribune, addressing a press conference at the Hyderabad Press Club, activist Imran Suharwardy, accompanied by Alhaj Gulshan Ilahi Qadri, Advocate Tahir Rajput, Advocate Zafar Arain, Nazish Fatima, Abdul Ghani Shah, Salman Zaidi, and Mukhtar Ahmed, revealed that 16 citizens have already lost their lives to dengue. They accused the Sindh Health Department, the district administration, and the municipal authorities of gross negligence, asserting that thousands have contracted the virus and hundreds remain hospitalised. At the same time, officials continue to conceal the real figures.

Suharwardy stated that "dengue has turned deadlier than Covid-19," citing the severe shortage of medicines and the lack of basic healthcare infrastructure in government hospitals. The activists also accused health authorities and private laboratories of withholding crucial data, leaving the public in the dark about the true extent of the crisis.

They further alleged that private hospitals are exploiting patients for profit, while corruption has paralysed Hyderabad's Civil Hospital. Even at the taluka level, hospitals reportedly lack proper facilities. The prices of medicines and essential medical supplies have doubled, worsening the burden on patients and families. Adding to the outrage, a special dengue ward established at Hilal-e-Ahmer Hospital in Latifabad Unit 6 was abruptly closed by management, despite the deputy commissioner's directives. "Hospitals are overflowing, and there aren't enough beds to accommodate patients," activists said, warning that the situation is rapidly worsening, as cited by The Express Tribune.

While families of dengue victims initially considered filing FIRs, they later refrained. The activists now plan to approach the Sindh High Court against the responsible officials, demanding a judicial inquiry commission, transparent data disclosure, and immediate action to combat Hyderabad's worsening health emergency, as reported by The Express Tribune.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
This situation shows why we need better cross-border cooperation on health issues. When our neighbors suffer, we're all affected. Hope the authorities wake up before this spreads further.
A
Aman W
Private hospitals exploiting patients during a health emergency is the worst kind of capitalism. This is why we need strong public healthcare systems. The government must take immediate action!
S
Sarah B
While I understand the frustration, I think we should be careful about making this a political issue. Health crises require cooperation, not blame games. Let's hope the judicial inquiry brings some solutions.
V
Vikram M
Dengue worse than COVID? That's terrifying! We went through so much during the pandemic, and now this. The authorities need to be transparent about the actual numbers and take preventive measures immediately.
K
Karthik V
This is why community awareness and preventive measures are so important. We should all be taking precautions against mosquito breeding in our areas. Prevention is better than cure, especially when the healthcare system is failing.

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