repeated demands for improved security, no noteworthy measures have thus far been instituted to check such incidents.
The Children’s Hospital at PIMS particularly offers a highly enabling environment for child kidnappers. The hospital neither has female guards to conduct body search of women visitors and attendants, nor any close-circuit security cameras or trained security guards. Since this is not the first incident of its kind, one would have expected the city’s largest tertiary care hospital to have instituted a counseling mechanism so that parents are guided not to leave their children unattended, or to trust strangers. Even that does not exist.
The incident is also being described as an example of acute mismanagement and administrative failure. Inter-departmental infighting at SZAB Medical University-PIMS, which continues to this day, must be brought to a grinding halt, failing which patient care will continue to be compromised. From the way PIMS is currently being managed, there can be no end to harrowing tales of medical neglect. The authorities at the helm of affairs have become so immune to such events that they have ceased to feel the pain of patients. Only a fortnight ago, a small child who was in need of ventilaory support was sent away by because the only two ventilators available in the Children’s Hospital were occupied. Loss of precious time resulted in the child’s death.
The formation of inquiry committees is a cosmetic measure; its findings can never pacify a mother whose newborn ends up being kidnapped from premises that is supposed to be safe and secure, or for a mother who rushed her child to the city’s largest hospital, only to be told that it does not have a ventilator to save his life.
It is learnt that the MCH Centre of PIMS is one of the most aspired working places for nurses, ‘ayas,’ and security staff because no other department within the hospital offers as grand an opportunity to make quick bucks. “Every now and then, the nurses, ‘ayas’ and security guards of this centre allegedly hand over to the attendants of patients, unsigned chits with a demand for various pharmacy products, which they reportedly sell at the pharmacy. There is no one to question them,” a reliable hospital source confided.
When Professor Akram was questioned, he assured that female guards will be deputed for body search of women visitors with effect from Monday. He said the hospital’s security has already been beefed up. Professor Akram maintained that the hospital has also advertised procurement of 110 web-based cameras. Professor Tariq Iqbal, who is the head of the Burn Centre, has been tasked to ensure that cameras are installed in the MCH Centre within a week’s time.
Why did it take so long for PIMS to take such basic security measures? What value can beefed up security have for a mother who has been robbed of the joy of holding and caressing her newborn? What untold secrets will the fact-finding committee reveal in its report? Who will guarantee protection from criminal activities within hospital premises? Questions like the aforementioned are raised each time an unfortunate episode of this kind takes place, only to be forgotten the following day. Things will be no different this time around too.