Tag: Hospitals

  • Telangana: 1442 assistant profs selected for 34 depts in teaching hospitals

    Telangana: 1442 assistant profs selected for 34 depts in teaching hospitals

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    Hyderabad: In the wake of ruling out the shortage of senior faculty in Telangana government medical colleges, the Medical and Health Service Recruitment Board (MHSRB) on Monday released a selection list for 1442 assistant professor posts.

    Selected doctors are skilled healthcare professionals who will be joining 34 specialty departments in teaching hospitals, under the Directorate of Medical Education (DME).

    Telangana health minister T Harish Rao while commending the board to have completed the process within a record time of five months, announced that these professors will be placed in the newly constructed medical colleges in the state.

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    “Counseling sessions will be conducted within the next two weeks based on merit, and the selected candidates will receive appointment letters,” said the minister.

    Expressing satisfaction over the transparency maintained while carrying out the entire process which also includes undertaking the objections raised by candidates and ensuring deserving candidates were given opportunities, Harish Rao announced that the recruitment process for 5204 staff nurse positions has commenced already.

    Hoping that the appointment of new nurses and assistant professors will enhance the quality of medical services provided by the newly formed medical colleges and their respective departments, the minister said that the government’s proactive approach to filling essential medical positions has paved the way for improved healthcare access throughout the state.

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    #Telangana #assistant #profs #selected #depts #teaching #hospitals

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Canine Horror: 6,875 Cases Reported At SMHS Hospital’s Anti-Rabies Clinic In Last One Year

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    SRINAGAR: A whopping 6,875 bite victims, mostly of dog bites, were reported to the Anti-Rabies Clinic at Srinagar’s Shri Maharaja Hari Singh (SMHS) hospital in last one year

    The presence of dogs in every nook and corner has led to man-dog confrontation due to which the number of cases of dog bites has increased in the region, doctors say.

    Quoting an official from anti rabies clinic SMHS, KNO reported  that from April Ist 2022 till 3Ist March 2023 as many as 6,875 bite cases were reported to ARC SMHS and most of them were from Srinagar.

    Giving details, he said that among animal bites in last one year 4,912 animal bite cases were reported from Srinagar at ARC SMHS, 317 from Budgam, 201 from Baramulla, 134 from Kupwara, 168 from Bandipora, 301 from Ganderbal, 221 from Pulwama, 138 from Shopian, 147 from Kulgam, 85 from Anantnag and 231 from other areas.

    Giving yearly data of bite cases, the official said that from April 1 2015 to March 2016, 7, 061 bite cases were reported to ARC SMHS, followed by 5,832 cases from April 2016 to March 2017, 6,802 cases from April 2017 to March 2018, 6,397 cases from April 2018 to March 2019,  6139 cases from April 2019 to March 2020,  4,808 from April 2020 to March 2021, 5,469 from April 2021 to March 2022 and 6,785 from April 2022 to March 2023.

    He said that 49,383 cases have been registered in Anti rabies clinic from April 2015 to March 2023.

    In Kashmir, dog bite is an important public health problem. Thousands of people become victims of animal bites, especially dog bites, and some of them develop rabies.

    Rabies is an invariably fatal viral disease resulting in approximately 59,000 human deaths per year globally, with 95% of cases occurring in Africa and Asia.

    The only way to prevent a rabies death is vaccination of an animal bite victim. In Kashmir, the burden and characteristics of dog bites are not routinely captured by the health system in place.

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    #Canine #Horror6875 #Cases #Reported #SMHS #Hospitals #AntiRabies #Clinic #Year

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Canine horror in Kashmir: 6,875 cases reported at SMHS Hospital’s anti-rabies clinic in last one year

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    Jahangeer Ganaie

    Srinagar, Apr 25: A whopping 6,875 bite victims, mostly of dog bites, were reported to the Anti-Rabies Clinic at Srinagar’s Shri Maharaja Hari Singh (SMHS) hospital in last one year

    The presence of dogs on every nook and corner has led to man-dog confrontation due to which the number of cases of dog bites has increased in the region, doctors say.

    An official from anti rabies clinic SMHS told news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that from 1st April 2022 till 3Ist March 2023 as many as 6,875 bite cases were reported to ARC SMHS and most of them were from Srinagar.

    Giving details, he said that among animal bites in last one year 4,912 animal bite cases were reported from Srinagar at ARC SMHS, 317 from Budgam, 201 from Baramulla, 134 from Kupwara, 168 from Bandipora, 301 from Ganderbal, 221 from Pulwama, 138 from Shopian, 147 from Kulgam, 85 from Anantnag and 231 from other areas.

    Giving yearly data of bite cases, the official said that from April 1 2015 to March 2016, 7, 061 bite cases were reported to ARC SMHS, followed by 5,832 cases from April 2016 to March 2017, 6,802 cases from April 2017 to March 2018, 6,397 cases from April 2018 to March 2019, 6139 cases from April 2019 to March 2020, 4,808 from April 2020 to March 2021, 5,469 from April 2021 to March 2022 and 6,785 from April 2022 to March 2023.

    He said that 49,383 cases have been registered in Anti rabies clinic from April 2015 to March 2023.

    In Kashmir, dog bite is an important public health problem. Thousands of people become victims of animal bites, especially dog bites, and some of them develop rabies.

    Rabies is an invariably fatal viral disease resulting in approximately 59,000 human deaths per year globally, with 95% of cases occurring in Africa and Asia.

    The only way to prevent a rabies death is vaccination of an animal bite victim. In Kashmir, the burden and characteristics of dog bites are not routinely captured by the health system in place—(KNO)

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    #Canine #horror #Kashmir #cases #reported #SMHS #Hospitals #antirabies #clinic #year

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Food delivery start-up ‘Tiffin Aaw’ Distributes Free Food to Patients, Attendants in Various City Hospitals

    Food delivery start-up ‘Tiffin Aaw’ Distributes Free Food to Patients, Attendants in Various City Hospitals

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    Start-up Founder & Owner Rayees Dar All Praise for Contributors

    Asif Iqbal

    Srinagar, Apr 16 (GNS): Tiffin Aaw – a Srinagar-based food delivery start-up, has been distributing free food to the patients and their attendants in several city hospitals amid ongoing holy month of Ramadan.

    In a statement issued to GNS, the founder and owner of Tiffin Aaw, Rayees Ahmad Dar said that they have been distributing free meals since the first day of the holy month of Ramadan.

    “We have been serving the patients and attendants for the last 25 days during Iftar (break-fast) and Sehri (pre-dawn meals). We distribute the food in various hospitals including at Children Hospital, JVC Bemina and L D Hospital,” Rayees said.

    He said that this free meal initiative was all possible because of all those who contributed for it. “We only prepare and distribute it but the actual credit goes to those who contribute some money for these needy people and make this possible,” he said.

    “We are thankful to them for choosing us because they believe in our food quality. They are not only contributing but also empowering the new start-ups,” he added.

    Nida Rehman, the co-founder of ‘Tiffn Aaw’ and who is also Rayees’s wife, said that they have been mostly focusing on Children Hospital Bemina.

    “We distribute at least 400 food packets to the patients and attendants per day in this hospital. The hospital is located on the bypass road and lacks a proper market where people could buy food for Iftari and Sehri, even as many are too poor to buy the food,” she said.

    Muzaffar Ahmad, an attendant from south Kashmir’s Kulgam district who was at the Children Hospital said, “We appreciate the organizers for serving free food to patients. It completely feels homemade and is hygienic to eat.”

    Notably, ‘Tiffin Aaw’ distributed free meals to the COVID-19 patients at city hospitals 2020 and 2021, which garnered them love and appreciation from different sections of society. (GNS)

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    #Food #delivery #startup #Tiffin #Aaw #Distributes #Free #Food #Patients #Attendants #City #Hospitals

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Nationwide drill in hospitals on Apr 10, 11 to check Covid preparedness

    Nationwide drill in hospitals on Apr 10, 11 to check Covid preparedness

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    New Delhi: Amid rising COVID-19 cases, a nationwide mock drill to take stock of hospital preparedness will be held on April 10 and 11 in which both public and private facilities are expected to participate.

    Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya will visit AIIMS, Jhajjar on April 10 to oversee the mock drill, officials said on Sunday.

    In a review meeting held on April 7, Mandaviya had urged state health ministers to visit hospitals and oversee the mock drills.

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    He had also advised them to review the preparedness with district administrations and health officials on April 8 and 9.

    In the meeting with state health ministers, and principal and additional chief secretaries held virtually, Mandaviya had stressed the need to identify emergency hotspots by monitoring trends of influenza-like illness (ILI) and severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) cases, ramping up testing and vaccination, and ensuring readiness of hospital infrastructure.

    Besides enhancing genome sequencing and ramping up whole genome sequencing of positive samples, he had emphasised creating awareness about following Covid-appropriate behaviour.

    During the meeting, states and union territories were informed that currently the World Health Organisation (WHO) is closely tracking a variant of interest (VOI), XBB.1.5, and six other variants are under monitoring (BQ.1, BA.2.75, CH.1.1, XBB, XBF and XBB.1.16), a health ministry statement had said.

    It was highlighted that while Omicron and its sub-lineages continue to be the predominant variants, most of the assigned variants have little or no significant transmissibility, disease severity or immune escape.

    The prevalence of XBB.1.16 increased from 21.6 percent in February to 35.8 percent in March. However, no evidence of an increase in hospitalisation or mortality has been reported, the statement said.

    During the meeting, it was observed that 23 states and union territories had average tests per million below the national average.

    Mandaviya had said that irrespective of the new variants, the five-fold strategy of ‘Test-Track-Treat-Vaccinate and adherence to Covid-Appropriate Behaviour’ continues to remain the tested strategy for Covid management.

    States and union territories were also requested to expeditiously increase the rate of testing from 100 tests per million as on the week ending April 7. They were further advised to increase the share of RT-PCR in tests.

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    #Nationwide #drill #hospitals #Apr #check #Covid #preparedness

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hospitals in Hyderabad witness surge in patients with moonlighting-related ailments

    Hospitals in Hyderabad witness surge in patients with moonlighting-related ailments

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    Hyderabad: Hospitals in Hyderabad have reported a surge in patients with brain and heart-related ailments caused by moonlighting. Moonlighting, a practice of working for a business of the same niche while being a permanent employee of another, has gained momentum due to remote working and reduced job security since the Covid pandemic. Although there is a debate on whether moonlighting is ethical, its side effects have not been discussed much.

    Doctors from Hyderabad, who have treated many patients who suffered brain and heart-related ailments due to moonlighting, have a word of caution.

    Tech professionals work for more than one company

    Hyderabad, a key IT and ITes destination in the country, is home to millions of technology professionals. There would be thousands of professionals who might be working for more than one company, and this trend would have only multiplied since the start of 2020 when the Covid-19 pandemic struck, and work from home became the new normal. However, hospitals in Hyderabad have now started receiving more and more patients with complaints and ailments which are believed to be the side-effects of moonlighting.

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    “We are a rehabilitation facility where we help patients who have suffered a brain stroke or heart attack or underwent some surgical procedure to recover. Over the past six months, we have received patients from various hospitals in the city who needed recovery after suffering a brain stroke or heart attack,” said Vijay Bathina, Director and Chief of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, at Uchchvas Transitionalcare.

    “The most common factor is that they were all IT professionals, they all were doing more than one job, they all worked for more than 60 hours a week, and were working late into the night. These three common factors indicate that moonlighting, which is a growing phenomenon among the new generation professionals, has started impacting their health.”

    Bathina explained that working for more than 60 hours a week will have an adverse impact on the health of a person.

    “It is important that professionals understand the fact that every individual has limitations to his/her physical ability. Adding more work hours will result in sleep deprivation, which will result in mental health complications like increased stress and decrease in cognitive performance. Hence, it is very important that professionals understand how much physical and mental strain they can take. Else, the body could give up suddenly, causing severe health complications,” he added.

    Doctors at various hospitals in Hyderabad are against moonlighting

    Highlighting certain key reasons, Manoj Vasireddy, neurologist at Amor Hospitals, said, “When a human body is put under stress, it releases cortisol and adrenaline hormones, which further lead to anxiety and depression. And these two are the major causes for mental health disorders. Sustained anxiety or depression is likely to cause high blood pressure which will have a direct impact on the heart.

    “It is very important that IT professionals who sit in front of a computer for long hours know how to balance their life with work. The more an individual works, the more she/he needs rest to recover and rejuvenate from day to day stress. Professionals working for long hours must also do some exercise to stay both physically and mentally fit.”

    Shivaram Rao Komandla, consultant neurophysician, Yashoda Hospitals in Hyderabad, said, “Working for long hours or engaging in physically or mentally demanding work can lead to chronic stress, which can contribute to a range of health issues, including neurological problems. Chronic stress has been linked to changes in the brain that can increase the risk of developing anxiety, depression, and other mental health disorders.

    “It can also cause physical changes in the brain, such as reduced volume in the prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for decision-making, planning, and impulse control. Also, chronic stress can contribute to the development of hypertension, which is a major risk factor for stroke. It’s important to prioritise self-care and manage stress when doing multiple jobs. This can include taking breaks, getting enough sleep, eating a healthy diet, and engaging in stress-reducing activities such as exercise or meditation.”

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    #Hospitals #Hyderabad #witness #surge #patients #moonlightingrelated #ailments

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Israel passes law banning breads in hospitals on Jewish Passover

    Israel passes law banning breads in hospitals on Jewish Passover

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    Jerusalem: Israeli lawmakers have passed a controversial law banning all leavened bread products that are not kosher for the Passover holiday in hospitals, according to Orthodox Jewish law.

    The law, sponsored by Israel’s hard-right and ultra-religious government, passed on Tuesday by a narrow margin of 48-43 in the 120-seat Knesset, or Parliament, reports Xinhua news agency.

    The remaining lawmakers either abstained from voting or were absent during the vote.

    The legislation follows religious Jewish laws that prohibit believers from eating wheat-based foods and beverages, known as “chametz”, during the seven-day Passover holiday.

    The new law authorises hospital directors to ban the supply of “chametz” foods in hospitals and forbid visitors from bringing such items.

    An earlier version of the controversial bill authorised hospital security staff to inspect visitors and search for “chametz” products, but the final version does not allow direct searches.

    The law sparked anger and criticism, with opponents saying it imposes Jewish dietary restrictions on non-religious people.

    A significant portion of the Israeli population may be affected by the new law, despite not practicing Judaism or observing Jewish dietary laws.

    According to official figures, about 20 per cent of Israel’s 9.7 million population are Muslim or Christian Arabs, and more than 40 per cent of the Jewish population live a secular lifestyle.

    Addressing the Knesset, opposition leader Yair Lapid, who heads the liberal Yesh Atid party, denounced the law as “forcing Judaism” on citizens.

    Uriel Boso, a lawmaker with the ultra-Orthodox party of Shas, argued in the Knesset that the law is “balanced”.

    According to Boso, the coalition drafted the bill after the Supreme Court ruled in 2021 that hospitals do not have the authority to ban “chametz” during Passover.

    Passover, also called Pesach, is a major Jewish holiday that celebrates the Biblical story of the Israelites escape from slavery in Egypt. This year it begins at sundown on April 5 and ends on April 13.

    The law comes as Israel was facing three-week-long massive protests over a contentious plan by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to overhaul the judiciary and weaken the Supreme Court.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: MNJ Cancer Hospital’s new oncology block ready for launch

    Hyderabad: MNJ Cancer Hospital’s new oncology block ready for launch

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    Hyderabad: The construction of the state-of-the-art 300-bedded oncology block built at a cost of Rs 80 crore in the Telangana government-run MNJ Cancer Hospital campus has been completed and is expected to be inaugurated very soon.

    This new block was constructed from the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) funds delivered by the Aurobindo Pharma group.

    The Oncology block has a total built-up area of 2,32,000 square feet on an extent of 2 acres of land and consists of a cellar, lower ground, ground plus five floors with a total bed capacity of 300 and all floors are interconnected with a staircase, ramp and lift.

    The facilities in this block will provide specialized and supportive cancer services to poor patients who come to MNJ Cancer Hospital from Telangana and neighbouring states, a press release informed

    The Foundation has also provided several facilities to ensure the smooth running of the facility such as a well-equipped with oxygen pipelines and cylinders, ICU beds and curtains, furniture for doctor consultation rooms, waiting areas, fire safety systems (fire hydrant, sprinkler, public address systems and fire extinguishers), HVAC systems, lifts, emergency exits, transformer yard, main power control room and lightning arrestors.

    With the establishment of the Aurobindo oncology block, MNJ Institute of Oncology and State Cancer Institute will be able to increase their capacity and accommodate more patients, the press note further said.

    “Furthermore, through the Aurobindo oncology block, enhanced specialised services such as a bone marrow transplant facility, children and adolescent wards, underground bunkers for targeted radiotherapy and genetics and molecular labs will also become accessible to patients. With these facilities, MNJ Institute of Oncology and State Cancer Institute will be further strengthened and will able to reach more patients and provide life-saving treatment to many. Moreover, patients from underprivileged communities will be able to access quality treatment and state-of-the-art services at no cost,” it said.

    K Nityananda Reddy, Director, APF, and Managing Director & Vice Chairman, Aurobindo Pharma Ltd, said, “We are happy to extend our support to MNJ Institute of Oncology and State Cancer Institute, which will make quality health care available to all. This will help to improve the quality of life of people and make advanced healthcare accessible and affordable for all”.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

    Hospitals blame psych bed reopening delay on suicide precautions, staff shortages

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    outbreak virus new york 41828

    That was one reason cited by Northwell Health for the continuing closure of Syosset Hospital’s 20-bed inpatient psych unit, according to a reopening plan submitted in February. The unit was repurposed for Covid patients in 2020, which required the rapid installation of electrical and gas lines that remain exposed in the rooms.

    “We cannot simply re-open the unit as a psychiatry unit as reconfiguring the rooms requires very significant time and expense,” Manish Sapra, executive director of Northwell’s behavioral health service line, wrote in the plan.

    Sapra said the hospital permanently reassigned the psych unit’s staff at that time and would need about nine months to a year to hire at least 60 people to staff it. The rest of Northwell’s 533 licensed psychiatric beds are online, according to the plan.

    NYC Health + Hospitals described a similar issue with a 24-bed unit at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, which is being used as a medical unit and needs to be reconfigured before it can house psychiatric patients again.

    The system’s plan, which is dated Jan. 18, says it expects to restore 179 of its 253 offline beds by the end of the year. The rest will not be back online until December 2024.

    Health + Hospitals spokesperson Chris Miller said the April 1 deadline does not apply to health systems like the city’s that were already working with the state on a reopening plan.

    “NYC Health + Hospitals is working closely with the state’s Office of Mental Health to reopen 200 psychiatric beds by this December, and we are on track to meet that goal,” Miller said in a statement. “Similar to other health systems, staffing remains the biggest challenge, and we have taken a number of steps to address this — from recruitment campaigns to school loan repayment for staff to new professional development programs.”

    Other hospitals blamed staffing shortages for remaining offline beds. New York-Presbyterian reported in its January reopening plan that Weill Cornell Medical Center’s 32-bed unit could only “safely staff and accommodate” 20 patients, and another 33 beds were offline at its 233-bed Westchester Behavioral Health Center due to “provider and staff coverage constraints.”

    Catholic Health’s Mercy Hospital, which is in Nassau County, said in its plan that it can only operate 29 of its 39 licensed beds due to size constraints and staffing levels and “does not have the ability to open these beds by the April 1st deadline.”

    Key context: As part of her $1 billion mental health plan unveiled in January, Hochul directed hospitals across the state to restore 850 inpatient psychiatric beds that they repurposed or closed during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Hochul released her plan as Democratic lawmakers across the country face increasing pressure to address escalating and often intersecting crises of homelessness and serious mental health concerns in their states and cities.

    Of the 850 beds Hochul told hospitals to reopen, approximately 200 have already been brought back online. Another 300 will become operational by the end of this year, according to the governor’s office.

    “Since Governor Hochul took action to restore psychiatric hospital beds taken offline during COVID, hospitals have developed plans to bring nearly 60% of the missing psychiatric beds online,” Avi Small, a spokesperson for Hochul, said in a statement.

    Small said the state Office of Mental Health is in active conversations with hospitals about how best to achieve compliance.

    State officials have also called on hospitals to restore beds they took offline prior to the pandemic, citing a “need for acute psychiatric inpatient capacity across the State,” according to a January memo first reported by POLITICO.

    “Restoring these beds to active status is a crucial component of the State’s plan to increase the availability of acute inpatient mental health services,” the memo said.

    Under Hochul’s budget proposal, hospitals may be fined up to $2,000 per day for each psychiatric bed that remains offline after April 1, but it is unclear whether the policy will make it into the final budget. The Assembly has proposed eliminating it, and the Senate wants to require the state to first consider mitigating factors.

    More constraints: Long wait times for a spot in other facilities or programs have also squeezed psychiatric capacity at hospitals.

    According to New York-Presbyterian’s reopening plan, its Westchester Behavioral Health Center has an average of 22 patients per day awaiting beds in state-run psychiatric institutions, which are intended for longer stays and typically take referrals from hospital psychiatric units.

    The Westchester facility also reported an average of eight patients per day awaiting placement in a residential treatment center and “routine delays” finding supportive housing units for patients who had arrived unhoused.

    Hochul has pledged to add 150 new beds to state facilities and create 3,500 new units of housing for New Yorkers with mental illnesses in the upcoming state budget. And Mayor Eric Adams has said he would build 8,000 supportive housing units.

    What’s next: Despite Hochul’s directive, some health systems are forging ahead with plans to decrease their numbers of psychiatric beds.

    Mount Sinai Beth Israel has a state license for 92 psychiatric beds but was only operating 64 of those before the pandemic. The hospital is relocating those 64 beds to the bygone nursing home Rivington House, which it is converting into a behavioral health center.

    The system will also decertify 21 psychiatric beds at the Mount Sinai Hospital on the Upper East Side, citing space needs for an expanded cancer hospital and “significant congestion” in the emergency room, according to its reopening plan submitted in January.

    But because Mount Sinai Morningside is reopening a 29-bed psychiatric unit, which had been offline for over a year before the pandemic due to planned renovations, the system claimed a net increase of eight operational psych beds — despite the decrease in licensed beds.

    The system claimed in its reopening plan that it has seen a “decline in the need for inpatient psychiatric hospitalizations for our patients” and would work to expand its psychiatric emergency departments and outpatient programs.

    A Mount Sinai spokesperson declined to comment.

    New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital has 49 psych beds across two units that were used for critical care during the pandemic. The hospital restored 24 of those last summer, but the remaining 25 beds “require further assessment and planning,” the system said in its reopening plan, noting its intent to open a behavioral health and primary care center nearby.

    “It is anticipated that this new facility will address the behavioral health needs of the service area,” system executives wrote. “The establishment of this new outpatient program will shape future considerations for inpatient psychiatric care.”

    Angela Smith Karafazli, a New York-Presbyterian spokesperson, said in a statement that the system “remains in active discussions with regulatory agencies about our proposed plan.”

    “At this point we don’t have additional info to share,” she added.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Innovative robotic surgery at Continental Hospitals in Hyderabad

    Innovative robotic surgery at Continental Hospitals in Hyderabad

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    Hyderabad: A successful Robotic Thymectomy Surgery was performed on a 60-year-old patient, at Continental Hospitals, Hyderabad today. Cardio thoracic Surgeon Dr Pradeep Rachakonda performed the robotic procedure on the patient who was rushed to the emergency room with a myasthenic crisis, and placed on ventilator.

    The patient had an enlargement of the left thymus gland with a growth called – Thymoma. This led to her neurological condition of Myasthenia Gravis, an acute muscle weakness

    Dr Pradeep suggested for a robotic procedure instead of a traditional, invasive one and counselled the family accordingly. This was because of the complications associated with the patient and her comorbidities that made an invasive procedure very risky.

    robot surgery March18 1

    Also, the robotic procedure performed offered several advantages over traditional surgery with minimal trauma, and faster recovery. Traditional Surgery would have required breaking of the Sternum (breast-bone), to access the chest cavity however with surgical robot it was done through placing minimally invasive ports in the chest region.

    Following the successful procedure, the patient was moved to the cardiac ICU and is now recuperating well. Continental Hospitals Robotic Surgery team have been performing several surgeries in Urology, Gastroenterology, Oncology and Gynaecology with a   steadfast commitment to patients with outcomes and understanding that advanced robotic procedures aid in faster patient-recovery and over all clinical outcomes.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )