Sri Lankan doctors seek urgent medical supplies to save babies

Sri Lankan doctors seek urgent medical supplies to save babies

Sri Lanka’s neonatologists have made a desperate call for urgent medical supplies to treat and save newborns needing emergency care, amid a severe shortage of essentials gripping the country that is battling an unprecedented economic crisis as disruption in supply of essentials has put public health system in distress

In a message to colleagues elsewhere, they have sought immediate donations such as Endotracheal (ET) tubes, among other crucial drugs and medical equipment.

“This is a critical message for colleagues overseas.Many things are lacking in our hospital set up, and we pediatricians and neonatologists are especially worried about the shortage of ET Tubes to ventilate newborn babies. Stocks would very soon run out,” said Dr. Saman Kumara, senior neonatologist practising in the government sector. In a YouTube message released on Sunday, he appealed to colleagues abroad to dispatch supplies for emergency neonatal care. “We have come to the stage of reusing ET tubes,” said Dr. Saman Kumara, who is also the President of the Perinatal Society of Sri Lanka, describing the situation as “pathetic”.

A statement from the Society said Sri Lanka had been maintaining an “outstanding” neonatal mortality rate in South East Asia, but due to the current economic and political crisis, “most of the essential consumables are not available in hospitals”.

The disruption in supply of essentials has put Sri Lanka’s enviable public health system in distress, as doctors across the country flag a severe shortage of vital medicines. Reports said the Kandy hospital had run out of anesthesia recovery drugs. A few days ago, doctors in Mullaitivu District General Hospital took to the streets carrying posters with messages such as “no medicines here”.

Meanwhile, the large weekend protest that began in Colombo on Saturday continued with thousands lining both sides of the road leading to the Presidential Secretariat Sunday evening too. “I stayed here last night. I am very tired. But there is no other option but to be here to assert our rights. Gota must go,” said a shipping industry employee, who said he was joining ongoing protests regularly. He was echoing the central demand of citizens’ protests that erupted over a month ago across the country, only intensifying in the massive sea-side agitation on Saturday and Sunday.

The Sri Lanka Medical Association (SLMA) said on Sunday that all hospitals in the country no longer had access to imported medical tools and vital drugs. “We are made to make very difficult choices. We have to decide who gets treatment and who will not,” the professional body said, after releasing a letter it had sent President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, warning him of the situation days ago.

Source: The Hindu