Category: Health

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Healthcare Shortages Deepen Across Maharashtra as Ground Reality Lags Behind Policy Promises

Healthcare Shortages Deepen Across Maharashtra as Ground Reality Lags Behind Policy Promises

Healthcare Shortages Deepen Across Maharashtra as Ground Reality Lags Behind Policy Promises Vacant posts, unsafe hostels, and delayed hospitals continue to cripple public healthcare despite new colleges and parliamentary assurances Public healthcare in Maharashtra is under increasing strain, as chronic staff shortages, unsafe working conditions, and delayed infrastructure projects continue to affect patient care across urban and rural districts. This is happening even as new medical colleges, nursing upgrades, and National Health Mission (NHM) initiatives are announced in Parliament of India. Doctors and medical students say that while policy announcements focus on expansion, the healthcare system is struggling with unresolved basics — including vacant posts, inadequate hostels, and hospitals that remain incomplete or under-equipped. Protests Highlight Growing Discontent On February 16, students and resident doctors at Grant Medical College and JJ Hospital in Mumbai began an indefinite hunger strike, demanding safer hostels, timely payment of stipends, improved infrastructure, and autonomy for the institution’s historic Gymkhana. Although the Dean of JJ Hospital agreed to address the demands by evening, the students’ association has warned that the protest will resume in a stronger form if assurances are not implemented by February 28. The agitation mirrors wider dissatisfaction captured in the Maharashtra Association of Resident Doctors (MARD) 2025 survey, conducted across 18 government medical colleges and involving 5,800 healthcare professionals. The survey found that 33 per cent of colleges fail to pay stipends on time, 11 per cent of resident doctors feel unsafe at work, and many hospitals suffer from overcrowded wards, poor sanitation, and lack of grievance redressal mechanisms. “We don’t need more colleges right now. We need safe hostels and functional hospitals,” said a resident doctor from Nashik. “We work 24-hour shifts and often don’t even get a place to rest or change.” Tribal Districts Face Severe Impact In tribal Palghar district, official data shows the crisis is more acute. As many as 811 sanctioned healthcare posts remain vacant, while major hospital projects face long delays. Maternal mortality continues to remain high due to poor emergency preparedness and delayed referrals. A study presented at the Maharashtra Mahila Aarogya Hakk Parishad in 2025 revealed that 10 out of 12 maternal deaths occurred because local hospitals lacked capacity, forcing patients to be shifted to distant facilities in Silvassa or Valsad. Most of the women were between 20 and 24 years old, with anemia and early pregnancies adding to the risk. Between 2011 and 2023, Palghar recorded 462 maternal deaths across government and private facilities. Although India’s Maternal Mortality Ratio has declined nationally, tribal blocks in Palghar continue to record figures well above the national average. A district official acknowledged the delays, citing funding constraints. While the district hospital project is 75 per cent complete, the trauma centre — sanctioned in 2019 — remains non-operational. Shortages of doctors, gynecologists, and essential medicines persist. Parliamentary Replies Acknowledge Gaps In responses to questions raised by Maharashtra MPs, the Union Health Ministry has acknowledged staffing gaps. In a Lok Sabha reply on February 13, 2026, the ministry stated that Maharashtra has 2.63 lakh registered nursing personnel, but their distribution is heavily skewed towards urban centres. Further, on February 10, 2026, the ministry told the Rajya Sabha that vacancies among doctors and specialists continue despite recruitment drives and incentives. Nationally, the doctor-to-population ratio stands at 1:811. District-level data shows that posts for gynecologists and anesthetists in Palghar and Gadchiroli remain largely unfilled. Though hardship allowances have been introduced to attract specialists to rural areas, retention remains a major challenge. Infrastructure and Safety Concerns Persist Medical students and resident doctors say problems extend beyond staffing. Hostels in Mumbai and Nagpur are described as overcrowded, unhygienic, and unsafe. Rooms meant for two often house five residents, sanitation is poor, potable water is scarce, and security is inadequate. Women students have raised serious safety concerns, including incidents of intruders entering nursing hostels at night. Despite repeated complaints, students allege that corrective action has been slow or absent. Expansion Without Execution To address disparities, the Maharashtra Cabinet approved six new nursing colleges in February 2024, and central funds were allocated to upgrade nursing schools into full-fledged colleges. However, several projects remain incomplete or non-operational, limiting their immediate impact. Healthcare professionals warn that without urgent attention to staffing, safety, infrastructure, and accountability, public healthcare in Maharashtra will remain overstretched. The warning from the ground is clear: expansion alone will not fix the system unless existing hospitals, hostels, and healthcare workers are adequately supported.
Green Corridor Saves a Life: Brain-Dead Woman’s Heart Reaches Powai Hospital in Just 17 Minutes

Green Corridor Saves a Life: Brain-Dead Woman’s Heart Reaches Powai Hospital in Just 17 Minutes

Green Corridor Saves a Life: Brain-Dead Woman’s Heart Reaches Powai Hospital in Just 17 Minutes Mumbai | Undercover Editor News Channel Mumbai: In a powerful reminder of how compassion can triumph over tragedy, the heart of a 38-year-old brain-dead woman was successfully transported across Mumbai in just 17 minutes, giving a new lease of life to a critically ill patient awaiting a heart transplant. The donor, admitted to Mahaveer Jain Hospital in Thane, was declared brain-dead after suffering a hypertensive cranial bleed. Following confirmation by a panel of medical experts, her family took the brave and selfless decision to donate her organs — transforming their personal loss into hope for many others. Seamless coordination, swift action A specialised organ retrieval team was immediately mobilised. With close coordination between hospital authorities and the Mumbai Traffic Police, a green corridor was created to ensure uninterrupted movement of the donor heart. The heart was retrieved at 5:00 pm and transported swiftly to Dr. L H Hiranandani Hospital in Powai, reaching the destination by 5:17 pm — a crucial time frame that made the life-saving transplant possible. New hope for a critically ill patient As per Zonal Transplant Coordination Centre (ZTCC) norms, the heart was allocated to a 60-year-old man suffering from end-stage heart failure. Doctors confirmed that the transplant surgery is currently underway, and the patient is being closely monitored. A message beyond medicine Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Sameer Kulkarni, CEO of Dr. L H Hiranandani Hospital, highlighted the urgent need for greater awareness about organ donation. He noted that over 80,000 patients in India are currently waiting for organ transplants, while the country’s donor rate remains below one donor per million population. Although India recorded its highest-ever number of organ transplants in 2024, the demand continues to far exceed availability. “Organ donation gives people a second chance at life. One donor can save up to eight lives and improve many more through tissue donation. It is one of the most powerful acts of humanity,” he said. A legacy of life This successful green corridor operation stands as a testament to medical teamwork, administrative efficiency, and above all, the extraordinary courage of a family that chose hope amid heartbreak — ensuring that even in death, life continues.

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