New Delhi: Joint Secretary in the Union Health Ministry Lav Agarwal on Tuesday said that only one state has till now reported "suspected" death due to oxygen shortage during the second wave of COVID-19. Agarwal was responding to to a query at a press conference
Quoting sources, PTI reports that 13 states and UTs including Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Odisha, Uttarakhand, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh, Jharkhand, Himachal Pradesh and Punjab have responded after the Union government sought data from them on such fatalities as the issue was raised in the ongong monsoon session of Parliament
According to Agarwal, states were specifically asked this question when the question was raised in Parliament and as per reports received only one state mentioned suspected death and no state has so far said that there were deaths because of oxygen shortage.
Reports suggests that only Punjab has reported four "suspected" deaths due to oxygen shortage.
Last month, opposition parties had hit out at the government for informing Parliament that no deaths due to oxygen shortage have been specifically reported by states and Union Territories during the second COVID-19 wave.
The Union government recently had sought from states and Union Territories data on deaths in connection with oxygen shortage during the second of COVID-19 earlier this year and the information was to be collated and presented in Parliament before the Monsoon session ends on August 13, official sources had said.
Agarwal said the whole country faced a one of its kind challenge related to oxygen, and while the availability was 2,000-3,000 metric tonnes, it rose to 9,000 metric tonnes.
It was seen how the people, states and the Union government connected at all levels to increase the medical oxygen supply, he said.
"We used industrial oxygen for medical oxygen usage, we provided oxygen concentrator, progressed PSA plants and also used Railways and Navy for oxygen transportation. We faced a very big challenge," he said.
Responding to a question on whether a large number of COVID-19 patients died on roads and hospitals due to acute shortage of oxygen in the second wave, Minister of State for Health Bharati Praveen Pawar on July 20 in a written reply in Rajya Sabha had said that health is a state subject.
"Detailed guidelines for reporting of deaths have been issued by the Union Health Ministry to all states and UTs. Accordingly, all states and UTs report cases and deaths to the Union Health Ministry on a regular basis. However, no deaths due to lack of oxygen has been specifically reported by states and UTs," Pawar had said.