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‘We’re cannon fodder’: Medical students feel betrayed

Updated on: 28 April,2021 08:26 AM IST  |  New Delhi
Agencies |

His hospital, overburdened and understaffed, wants him to keep working until the lab confirms he has COVID-19.

‘We’re cannon fodder’: Medical students feel betrayed

A health worker attends to a patient in a COVID-19 ward in New Delhi on Tuesday. Pic/AFP

Since the beginning of the week, Dr. Siddharth Tara, a postgraduate medical student at New Delhi’s government-run Hindu Rao Hospital, has had a fever and persistent headache. He took a COVID-19 test, but the results have been delayed as the country’s health system implodes. His hospital, overburdened and understaffed, wants him to keep working until the lab confirms he has COVID-19.


There are 541 medical colleges in India with 36,000 post-graduate medical students, and according to doctors’ unions constitute the majority at any government hospitals — they are the bulwark of the India’s COVID-19 response. But for over a year, they have been subjected to mammoth workloads, lack of pay, rampant exposure to the virus and complete academic neglect. In five states that are hit hardest by the surge, postgraduate doctors have held protests against what they view as administrators’ callous attitude toward students like them, who urged authorities to prepare for a second wave but were ignored.


Jignesh Gengadiya, a 26-year-old PG medical student, knew he’d be working 24 hours a day, seven days a week when he signed up for a residency at the Government Medical College in Surat, Gujarat. What he didn’t expect was to be the only doctor taking care of 60 patients in normal circumstances, and 20 patients on duty in the ICU. “ICU patients require constant attention. If more than one patient starts collapsing, who do I attend to?” he asked.


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