hospitals as they think it would break their monopoly.
In some cases, heads of departments even don’t allow second unit of the facility, though bed occupancy in their ward remains 200 percent throughout the year.
In LRH, according to officials, the waiting list at the cardiovascular ward is presently 2017.
“If a patient comes to LRH and wants his surgery should be performed as per rules, he would have to wait till 2017. Even then, the patient would have to arrange all items used in the procedure but the surgeon would not charge him,” a cardiovascular surgeon of same ward told The News.
Pleading anonymity, he said, they had to operate two days a week. “Imagine, there is the whole KP, Fata and Afghanistan, and we have a two-day operation theatre and therefore patients have to wait for years,” he argued.
Dr Riaz Anwar, head of cardiovascular department at LRH, however denied that their waiting list had reached up to 2017.
He said they usually gave two months time to the patients for surgery.
Interestingly, they are required to share same operation theatre with another overcrowded ward, namely cardiothoracic, which is also the only one in the whole province. It is not only dangerous but involves a lot of risks for the cardiovascular patients as cardiothoracic patients are mostly infected.
In the developed countries like the United States, mortality rate of infected post-operated cases is almost 80 percent, according to doctors.
“In the LRH, cardiovascular surgeons unfortunately use same operation theatre and same table. Germ is a hidden enemy but there is no other option,” stated an official of the hospital.
He said the government should set up another cardiovascular unit at the Hayatabad Medical Complex (HMC) as it would help reduce burden on LRH.
In almost every corner of the world, as per protocol, when cath lab is set up, cardiac surgery is established, according to cardiovascular surgeons in Peshawar.
“If cardiac cath is set up, then it is mandatory to establish cardiac surgery, otherwise it is considered a crime. As per protocol, if a patient develops any complications in cath lab, a cardiac surgeon is immediately called in for supervision. The patient is even operated on in the same OT, if needed,” according to doctors.
The previous government had done one thing positive in health by establishing a state-of-the-art second cardiology unit at the HMC.
Luckily, Pakistan’s first electro-physiologist and a foreign qualified cardiologist, Dr Zahid Aslam Awan, runs the unit in HMC, but the services are inadequate as they don’t take patients with high risk for angiography or angioplasty procedures apparently due to lack of cardiac facility there.
“It is the only recognised centre in Pakistan that provides postgraduate training in electrophysiology and Dr Zahid Aslam is the lone supervisor in this specialty but there is no cardiac surgery unit to help the patients requiring cardiac surgery,” a cardiologist at the HMC told The News, when reached for his comments.
Pleading anonymity, he said that some influential doctors had initially opposed creating the second cardiology unit in HMC, saying there was no need of it as work was going on at the Peshawar Institute of Cardiology (PIC).
“Construction work on PIC began in 2008 during the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) government and it couldn’t be completed during the Awami National Party and Pakistan People’s Party-led government. Even the work is taking place during the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf-led government. In the meantime in Punjab, they established four major cardiac facilities such as the Punjab Institute of Cardiology, Rawalpindi Institute of Cardiology and a full-fledged facility at PIMS,” a cardiologist said.
Though it is not clear when PIC would be operational, doctors say it would be choked off due to growing number of cardiac patients.
“Twenty-five percent people are suffering from coronary disease. The government would need to establish more such institutes to cope with cardiac patients in the province,” Dr Riaz Anwar observed.
In Pakistan, people at the age of 35 start developing cardiac related disorders, and according to research, surgery is far better than multiple stents.
According to health experts, the government should establish the second cardiac unit at HMC where infrastructure is already available and would not require the government to spend huge extra fund.
“I think it can cost Rs160 million if they start it at HMC, where they should begin with one table and would easily do six procedures a week and two small cases a day,” an expert said.