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Indian Express
2 days ago
- Health
- Indian Express
GMCH-32: Newly constructed block to be inaugurated on Aug 8, to decongest gynaecology dept
The newly constructed 283-bed Emergency-cum-Trauma Block at GMCH-32 is all set to be inaugurated on August 8, to coincide with the 11th convocation, promising to reduce overload on the existing emergency units in the city, improve patient care and ensure better utilisation of resources. In the hospital's history, the A Block, where 24-hour emergency services are provided to patients, was the first to become functional, and since 1996, there has been no renovation of this block. 'With the new state-of-the-art trauma block ready for patients, the first step will be to renovate the area, with the engineering and fire safety departments already in action to ensure the latest facilities, amenities and safety. Once this is complete, we will start the process of decongesting our gynaecology department, which also comprises the labour room, and witnesses patients from across the region, including the large migrant population that we have. We will be utilising this space for the expansion of the department, and also add more beds to ease rush. We are making efforts to provide more speciality and super-speciality services. The process of space creation is a dynamic one,' said Prof A K Attri, Director-Principal, GMCH-32. The gynaecology department of the hospital has 100 beds, with 10 beds added way back in 2017. The number of patients in the gynaecology department is very high, and despite the increase in beds, there are not enough beds for pregnant women. More than 5,000 women deliver in GMCH every year, and when the number of cases is higher, two women have to be adjusted on one bed, with the occupancy rate almost 200 per cent. The hospital receives delivery cases from Chandigarh, Punjab, Haryana, Himachal, Uttarakhand, UP, and despite the shortage of beds, the effort is to provide treatment. As per doctors, the gynaecology department of GMCH-32 has the highest number of deliveries, followed by GMSH-16 and then PGI. Both PGI and GMCH-32 will have exclusive Mother and Child Centres, with work on the project of GMCH-32 having started in 2018, but was delayed due to COVID and has now restarted. With a budget of about Rs 73 crore, the centre, which will be open in about two years, will have two basements and four floors and have a facility of 251 beds, with the latest facilities and services under one roof. Dr Attri said it will decrease infant and mother mortality rate. PGI's Advanced Mother and Child Care Centre, where work is in full swing and may be inaugurated at the end of this year, will be equipped with the latest technologies and offer world-class facilities in both maternal and neonatal care. A human milk bank, advanced infertility treatment, robotic surgery, critical care obstetrics, high-risk maternity unit, foetal medicine unit, pre-implantation genetic diagnosis, prenatal diagnosis, and reproductive endocrinology unit will be part of the centre. Here, there will be a modern developmentally supportive and family-centred level IV NICU designed as per current International NICU design specifications, a family-centred Kangaroo Mother Care ward, and a comprehensive high-risk follow-up programme. A long-needed facility, the Advanced Paediatric Centre at GMSH-16 was inaugurated last year. The 32-bedded facility offers state-of-the-art specialised care, featuring a 12-bedded hybrid ICU unit comprising ventilator beds and high-dependency unit beds. The centre includes 20 oxygen-supported beds and features ECG, echocardiography, and ultrasonography, all under one roof, so that parents don't have to go anywhere for these tests and their children receive the best care. There are 24-hour services like blood transfusion, sample collection, nebulisation etc, for critical patients, and this advanced centre has eased the burden on PGI.


Indian Express
4 days ago
- Health
- Indian Express
Plan on advanced centre for infectious diseases at GMCH-32 shelved
In January 2022, the UT Administration had approved the establishment of an advanced centre for infectious diseases on a 1.6-acre plot on the GMCH-32 campus. Now, three years later, the plan has been shelved, and a new Academic Block 2 has been proposed. 'The government is very keen to increase MBBS seats, as the plan is to have a better doctor-patient ratio and so we will need more lecture theatres, infrastructure and more facilities for more MBBS and MD students,' explains Prof A K Attri, Director-Principal of GMCH-32. As of now, GMCH-32 offers 150 MBBS seats, with an increase in seats done between 2013 and 2019, and the post-graduation seats at the hospital are 157. The director hopes that the MBBS seats will increase to 250, resulting in more patient care for the increasing number of patients from across the region, keeping in line with the Central government's plan. 'The plans for the new academic block have already been submitted to the Architecture Department more than a month back,' adds Dr Attri. The move for an advanced centre for infectious diseases came after the emergence of infections like H1N1 and Covid-19 and the need to provide specialised services to patients from across the region for infectious and communicable diseases. It was also highlighted that viral infections, tuberculosis, bacterial and fungal pneumonia are prevalent in this geographical region, and the centre would provide treatment under one roof. Dr Attri said, 'We now have several facilities for critical care, with a new trauma block ready to be inaugurated this month at GMCH-32, and one being planned in Mani Majra by GMSH-16 and PGI, also offering super-speciality services, and so the plan for more seats for MBBS and MD.' Incidentally, the PGIMER has also received final approval to develop a 100-bed medical college at Sarangpur, setting the ground for the institute to offer MBBS for the first time, expanding healthcare infrastructure in the region, and giving more opportunities to aspiring doctors.


Time of India
01-07-2025
- Politics
- Time of India
90-day legal mediation drive to ease court burden
Jaipur: Rajasthan State Legal Services Authority (RSLSA) Tuesday commenced a 90-day mediation initiative, designed by the National Legal Services Authority (NALSA), to reduce backlog of cases across judicial levels, from taluka courts to high courts. Called 'Mediation for the Nation', the drive will run till Sept 30. "The categories of matters eligible for mediation include matrimonial disputes, accident claims, domestic violence, cheque bounce cases, commercial disputes, service matters, criminal compoundable cases, consumer disputes, debt recovery cases, partition and eviction cases, land acquisition matters, among others," said Hari Om Sharma Attri, member secretary of RSLSA, while addressing a press conference here. Courts will sort out 5% of their total pending cases which merit resolution through mediation. The campaign is a pan-India effort to take mediation to "every nook and cranny" as an alternative and people-friendly mode of dispute resolution, Attri said. TNN Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Doctor's Day 2025 , messages and quotes!


Hindustan Times
31-05-2025
- Health
- Hindustan Times
Chandigarh: Long wait for GMCH trauma centre likely to end in June
In the works since August 2020, the 283-bed emergency-cum-trauma centre at Government Medical College and Hospital (GMCH), Sector 32, is expected to become operational by June, confirmed director-principal Dr Ashok Attri. 'We have received the takeover letter from the UT engineering department and formed a committee for inspecting the newly constructed building. We are hopeful of starting the centre by next month,' said Dr Attri. The procurement of beds and furniture has been done by the hospital administration. The committee formed for the inspection of the newly constructed building, chaired by GMCH medical superintendent GP Thami, is looking after its nitty-gritties. The construction work and the installation of air conditioning system has also been completed. However, the cleaning and sanitisation work is still going on, with issues raised by the inspection committee getting resolved. UT chief engineer CB Ojha said, 'We have sent the inventory list to GMCH-32 as many costly equipment are kept in the building. The construction work has been completed from our end. We are now looking after the finishing work along with the hospital administration.' Back in 2019, the UT administration had given the go-ahead for the construction of the centre, with an expected expenditure of ₹52.77 lakh. Construction of the state-of-the-art facility had begun in August 2020, with completion estimated by February 2022 (18 months). But ever since, the deadline had got extended multiple times—first due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and then owing to environmental clearance delays and sluggish construction progress. Currently, the emergency wing of the hospital is equipped with 45 beds, buckling under the pressure of nearly 400 emergency cases daily. In the absence of adequate beds, patients continue to be treated on trolleys. The project was envisioned to take the load off PGIMER, which is currently the only trauma care facility in the city providing critical care to victims of road accidents, natural or man-made disasters and other emergencies. Once complete, the centre is expected to significantly ease this pressure, with 40 ventilator beds, operation theatres, ICU, isolation and ambulatory care wards, CT scan and MRI services.