Under
a tree, one Indian village cares for its COVID-19 sick
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[May 17, 2021]
By Danish Siddiqui
MEWLA GOPALGARH, India (Reuters) - In a
village in northern India engulfed by COVID-19, the sick lie on cots
under a tree, glucose drips hanging from a branch. Cows graze all
around, while syringes and empty medicine packets are strewn on the
ground.
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There is no doctor or health facility in Mewla Gopalgarh in India's
most-populous state of Uttar Pradesh, a 90-minute drive from the
national capital Delhi. There is a government hospital nearby but it
has no available beds and the villagers say they cannot afford
private clinics.
Instead, village practitioners of alternative medicine have set up
an open-air clinic where they distribute glucose and other remedies
to patients with symptoms of COVID-19.
Some believe lying under the neem tree, known for its medicinal
properties, will raise their oxygen levels. There is no scientific
basis for this belief or for some of the other remedies being
offered.
"When people become breathless, they have to go under trees to raise
their oxygen levels," said Sanjay Singh, whose 74-year-old father
died a few days ago after developing a fever. Singh said his father
was not tested and died in two days.
"People are dying and there is nobody to look after us," he said.
India's devastating second wave of infections, which has brought
even hospitals in big cities such as Delhi to breaking point, is
ripping through the country's vast rural hinterland where healthcare
is threadbare.
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi,
who is facing criticism for failing to prepare
for the second wave, said in a speech last week
that the pandemic was spreading fast in the
villages and urged people not to ignore the
symptoms.
"Get the test done, isolate yourself and start
medication on time," he said.
But in this village, people are making do as
best they can. One woman had borrowed an oxygen
cylinder from a neighbour whose condition had
improved slightly, her family said.
"Truth is, there has been no COVID-19 testing.
We have tried but they told us they don't have
enough staff," said 48-year old Yogesh Talan, a
former headman of the village.
(Reporting by Danish Siddiqui; Writing by Manas
Mishra; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani, Karishma
Singh and Estelle Shirbon)
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