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Fixing Mayo Hospital —Syed Mansoor Hussain

 

 

We owe it to them, to the patients that come to Mayo Hospital and to our medical heritage to fix and not destroy Mayo Hospital

Over the last year, not a single bathroom available to patients, attendants or junior staff has been fixed or renovated on the surgical floor in the main building of Mayo Hospital. Multiple visits by senior bureaucrats, politicians, governmental advisors of all stripes and other VIPs has produced no change in what are usually referred to as ‘quality of life’ issues and facilities.

Grand plans to remake Mayo Hospital are being considered. It is perhaps important to mention here that Mayo Hospital is more a city than just a hospital. It is spread over almost a square mile and has dozens of departments housing many different specialties, and thousands of in-patient beds and out-patient departments that are visited by thousands of patients every day. Its different laboratories cater to a similarly large number of patients. 

The folly of any ‘grand’ plan to make this hospital better is well demonstrated by the monstrosity called the Surgical Tower, an incomplete behemoth that literally towers over the old building. It is too expensive to complete and much too expensive to tear down; its original purpose lost in the fog of time. 

My fervent plea to the powers that be is: please decide the future of the Surgical Tower, and then either complete it or tear it down before any major change is made to the old building. The immediate need, however, has to be the improvement of the existing facilities in the historic buildings as well as the rest of the hospital. 

Clearly, destroying or significantly altering any of the historic building should be avoided. Crumbling walls, roofs in disrepair, water and sewage pipes that have leaked for so long that the water supply and the sewage are now indistinguishable, all merit immediate attention. Further neglect is most likely to make them unsalvageable in a decade or so. 

Whatever needs to be done, the present culture of what seems like wilful neglect must first be brought to an end. Those charged with maintaining the existing facilities are clearly incapable or else unwilling to do so. The present state of affairs is dismal. 

A couple of examples might illustrate my point. First, one of the smaller surgical departments located in the main building raised almost two and a half million rupees to upgrade its ward and build bathrooms for patients as well as the staff. Eight bathrooms including two showers with hot water were built. The hospital administration promised an added sum of less than a million rupees to complete the renovations. 

However with a new government came a new administration and the hospital never paid up its share. The bathrooms were at least completed and functional. And being the only ‘clean’ bathrooms available for patients and staff on the entire surgical floor they were used by not just the patients and staff in the department for whom they were built but by almost everybody else, thus straining the facilities to a breaking point. 

When things broke down as expected, the hospital maintenance staff refused to fix them since they had not been responsible for building them! The real reason was of course that they had not received their ‘pound of flesh’ during the original construction. Now they keep turning off the water supply on some pretext or the other having given up on the flesh part but still hoping for a few drops of blood.

Another example of the inadequacy of maintenance is the problem of air-conditioners. Mayo Hospital probably has hundreds of air-conditioners and evidently only two people to service or fix them. When summer started, obviously the first air-conditioners fixed were in the administrative buildings followed by areas visited most often by VIPs. Given the capacity to service a few air conditioners in a day, by the time patient care areas get their turn, summer will be long gone. 

I could go on and on till I beat the bush into a dead horse but why. The point is simply that those responsible for maintaining and improving existing facilities neither have the interest nor the financial incentive to do so. However, the very idea of a mega billion-rupee project sends a frisson of excitement up their proverbial spines and everybody in the ‘food chain’ starts drooling at the very thought of a ride on such a rich gravy train. 

It would seem that proper maintenance and upgrade of the historic building would not only make financial sense but would also preserve our heritage. But the problem here is a mixture of the gravy problem mentioned above and bureaucratic inertia. To get anything approved and built by the authorities concerned takes many years since it requires going through that ultimate bureaucratic nightmare: ‘the proper channel’. 

By the time anything important and reasonably expensive is approved, the bureaucrats that approved it as well as the head of the department that asked for the improvement are long gone. As a result, most things that happen officially only happen when mega projects are involved or else when a roof collapses or some other catastrophe occurs. Most of the less costly improvements are however done through private funding and often without official approval, creating a host of ‘encroachments’. 

I realise that the present government has a thing about encroachment, as it should. But most of the encroachments built within Mayo Hospital serve some important purpose and benefit patients or the staff. And they are there because ‘proper channels’ like the drains of the above mentioned bathrooms seem to be blocked most of the time. 

But the hospital still functions, thousands of patients get taken care of and hundreds of operations and procedures are performed daily. This is a testament to the will of mostly the young physicians and young nurses that do most of the work. We owe it to them, to the patients that come to Mayo Hospital and to our medical heritage to fix and not destroy Mayo Hospital.

Syed Mansoor Hussain has practised and taught medicine in the US. He can be reached at smhmbbs70@yahoo.com

Daily Times:May 25, 2009