India - 10 babies killed, 16 injured, 45 rescued as fire rips through NICU in Jhansi city, 15 Nov 2024

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Ugh it keeps getting worse!
 
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1731784889860.jpeg

Some of the lucky ones.

Source: Jhansi hospital fire: 10 babies dead, 3 charred bodies unidentified - The Tribune
 
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Wonderful news! Kuldeep, who rescued at least three babies (I've seen some articles say five or six) but couldn't find his own child has been reunited with his son. Another woman had rescued him and she had admitted him to hospital herself, he had burns to his hand which are being treated.

 
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Wonderful news! Kuldeep, who rescued at least three babies (I've seen some articles say five or six) but couldn't find his own child has been reunited with his son. Another woman had rescued him and she had admitted him to hospital herself, he had burns to his hand which are being treated.

Oh that is wonderful news!!
 
  • #28
Oh that is wonderful news!!
Yeah, for all the horror, there is a lot of heroism, too. A lot of folks who stepped up and saved as many of these precious kids as they possibly could. And the amount who were saved by strangers to them seems to be the vast majority.

MOO
 
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This article has a very good timeline/breakdown of events. It sounds like the electrical cause is supported by CCTV footage. It also confirms that the evacuation of infants was throttled by medical staff, and then when the fire intensified, essentially became a free for all with families forcing their way in past staff to save infants, and civilians and medical staff smashing windows to evacuate as many children as they could snatch from the encroaching flames out the openings. The latter probably saved lives that would otherwise have been lost, but led to difficulties because infants had been separated from their identifying documentation and caused great distress and confusion for those seeking to find their babies, or for those staff who needed to render appropriate treatment.

MOO
 
  • #30

This article has a very good timeline/breakdown of events. It sounds like the electrical cause is supported by CCTV footage. It also confirms that the evacuation of infants was throttled by medical staff, and then when the fire intensified, essentially became a free for all with families forcing their way in past staff to save infants, and civilians and medical staff smashing windows to evacuate as many children as they could snatch from the encroaching flames out the openings. The latter probably saved lives that would otherwise have been lost, but led to difficulties because infants had been separated from their identifying documentation and caused great distress and confusion for those seeking to find their babies, or for those staff who needed to render appropriate treatment.

MOO
Thank you for the summary - the previous article also mentioned the desire for DNA tests to confirm identity-
 
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Thank you for the summary - the previous article also mentioned the desire for DNA tests to confirm identity-
Yeah, I think some of the families are really concerned their children had been misidentified.

One woman who lost her child had been told they'd identified the children by their ID tags, but she pointed out that an (unrelated) child she personally had rescued and taken to hospital had no ID tag at all and she'd had to register the child under her own name. (I do think this could have been Kuldeep's baby - the stories align.)

MOO
 
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Yeah, I think some of the families are really concerned their children had been misidentified.

One woman who lost her child had been told they'd identified the children by their ID tags, but she pointed out that an (unrelated) child she personally had rescued and taken to hospital had no ID tag at all and she'd had to register the child under her own name. (I do think this could have been Kuldeep's baby - the stories align.)

MOO
Such a chaotic situation- so difficult for everyone- I am so glad that Kuldeep’s child was found and identified!
 
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Another infant has died. The doctor is linking it to his prematurity, not the fire. (I don't think the fire would have helped, though.) As a child born so early (seven months gestation) and reportedly being so frail, I wonder if this child was one of the very few rescued from the higher needs room.

 
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Ugh…
“The team said the extension chord caught fire first and it spread to the nearby ventilator leading to the tragedy. An earlier investigation by the divisional commissioner and DIG also pointed at short-circuit.”

Previous articles said NICU was over capacity… looks like that might have lead to an overloaded cord- so preventable :(
 
  • #39
Ugh…
“The team said the extension chord caught fire first and it spread to the nearby ventilator leading to the tragedy. An earlier investigation by the divisional commissioner and DIG also pointed at short-circuit.”

Previous articles said NICU was over capacity… looks like that might have lead to an overloaded cord- so preventable :(
I think there was so much here that wasn't done that should have been because they were moving to the new unit in a matter of weeks. The expired extinguishers, the poor quality equipment. How much should have been repaired or replaced that just wasn't? The new unit had been under construction for ten years.

I don't fault the unit staff for taking on too many children. Those kids would have likely died shortly after birth without help. But I do fault those who didn't maintain the equipment, and I do fault the staff who throttled the evacuation of children. They should have been hustling babies out of there the moment the fire started, and they didn't.

MOO
 
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I think there was so much here that wasn't done that should have been because they were moving to the new unit in a matter of weeks. The expired extinguishers, the poor quality equipment. How much should have been repaired or replaced that just wasn't? The new unit had been under construction for ten years.

I don't fault the unit staff for taking on too many children. Those kids would have likely died shortly after birth without help. But I do fault those who didn't maintain the equipment, and I do fault the staff who throttled the evacuation of children. They should have been hustling babies out of there the moment the fire started, and they didn't.

MOO
Oh my goodness, I’d read the new ward was under construction, but hadn’t logged it was for 10 years, those poor people, families, nurses, all of it
 

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