Three injured in wall collapse

New Delhi, Jun 6 (PTI) A woman and two children were seriously injured when the wall of an under-construction building collapsed here following rains, police said today. The incident took place in Sangam Vihar of south-east Delhi at around 8.30 pm yesterday, police said.

The injured were rushed to the AIIMS Trauma Centre where their condition is stated to be serious, police said.

Institute to open 250-bed hospital

Construction likely to start by year-end

In Order to deal with the burgeoning patient rush at the region’s premier institute, the PGI will soon add a 250-bed hospital adjacent to the existing Nehru Hospital and the Kairon block.

The focus would be to provide quality care to cancer patients at the new block as 100 beds out of the total 250 beds would be kept exclusively for the cancer patients.

The addition of the new block will be the first addition of general beds block after the Nehru Hospital, which was built over four decades ago and now is saturated with the capacity of having nearly 1,300 beds.

The addition of the new block is a part of the PGI’s expansion plan, which also includes the completion of the Advanced Trauma Centre.

“The entire bed strength of the hospital is around 1,600 beds which includes beds in the specialty blocks like the Advanced Eye Centre, Advanced Cardiac Centre and the Advanced Paediatric Centre. Going by the patient rush, the addition of the new block would strength the PGI’s patient care index,” added an official. The construction of the new block might begin by end of the current year or in the first quarter of next year.

As far as the statistics coming out from the hospital, the premier referral hospital appears to be barely meeting the requirements of those thronging its premises. As per the official statistics at the hospital there are around 60,000 annual admissions in its wards and almost a 100 percent bed occupancy ratio.

Meanwhile, along with the beds for general patients, the hospital is also contemplating to add more private wards in the hospital’s new block.

Drunken soldiers given a month to fight sacking

A top army commander in the Northern Territory has launched a three-pronged attack on drink-driving and alcohol-fuelled violence among his soldiers.

Brigadier Gus McLachlan began the crackdown after a warning from the Chief of Army in Canberra last month, who was concerned about the number of Australian troops being injured or prosecuted as a result of binge drinking.

Since the public warning, only one soldier from Darwin-based 1st Brigade has been caught drink-driving.

But Brigadier McLachlan said there have been 18 alcohol-related incidents involving Darwin-based Defence Force personnel reported this year, including drunken brawls.

Brigadier McLachlan said eight soldiers had been involved in “very serious trouble”.

He said that group of soldiers have had to demonstrate to him why they should not be discharged from the army, and were given a month to build a case against their sacking.

He said another three troops have been told that they may be asked to leave, after offending a second time, with another seven soldiers handed a routine reprimand.

He said extra military police were brought from interstate last weekend, to monitor troops coming home from nights out in Darwin.

He said more breath testing will also be carried out at the Robertson Barracks.

He said soldiers would also attend a presentation from police and medical staff from Darwin’s National Trauma Centre on the dangers of drink-driving.

Liberal RAH rebuild costed too low: AMA

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) says the Liberal Party’s estimated cost of $700 million to rebuild the Royal Adelaide Hospital is too low.

The AMA says the Opposition must revert to an alternative $1.4 billion option to refit the hospital if it wins Saturday’s South Australian election.

AMA president Andrew Lavender says, as well as bed replacement, core sections of the hospital need rebuilding, including the emergency and intensive care units.

He says that cannot be done for $700 million.

“We do need a world-class trauma centre and while we don’t expect that facilities need to be available in the next six years or so, there certainly has to be a planned, staged redevelopment of the Royal Adelaide Hospital,” he said.

“I think it’s a bit disingenuous to just talk about building the beds when we know we need the rest of the hospital also needs to be rebuilt.”

A spokesman for the Liberal Party says it is not surprising the peak medical body would be pushing for more money.

QEH money

Labor has pledged $125 million toward more refurbishing work at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, if it is returned to office.

There would be a new three-storey building to accommodate an emergency department, an outpatients area and nine operating theatres.

Oz bushfire death toll rises to 107, 750 homes destroyed

Melbourne, Feb.9 (ANI): The death toll in Australia’s worst ever bushfires has risen to 107 and, authorities expect it to go up to at least 230.

Fires were still burning out of control and putting towns at risk in the Beechworth and Yackandandah regions in the state’s northeast, even as Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has accused arsonists in Victoria of committing mass murder.

According to The Herald Sun, state emergency officials claimed that some of the fires were deliberately lit, and added that they had also received reports of people returning to relight blazes after fire crews had left an area.

At least 750 homes have been destroyed and 3733 people have registered with the Red Cross after evacuating their properties. The number left homeless is expected to be far higher, the Red Cross said.

It was confirmed that at least four children have died, but that figure would also be expected to rise as full details emerged.

A two-year-old girl was among 13 in intensive care in hospital. Twenty-two people with shocking burns were admitted to the Alfred hospital, the state’s main trauma centre, where staff ran out of morphine trying to ease patients’ pain.

Most of the damage was done by two massive fires – one that virtually wiped out towns northeast of Melbourne, including Kinglake and Marysville with a 100km front – and a second inferno that raced across Gippsland.

TV veteran Brian Naylor and his wife Moiree were among the dead. The pair died when the fire at Kinglake swept through their property.

Six victims were in one car trying to outrun the inferno which swept through Kinglake in minutes. A resident said the town was littered with burnt-out cars and he believed many contained bodies.

Weather conditions have eased since Saturday’s firestorm, but firefighters were still battling 31 active blazes across the state as of 11.00 a.m. Local time, authorities said.

The communities of Stanley, Bruarong, Dederang, Gundowring, Gundowring Upper, Kancoona, Kancoona South, Coral Bank, Glenn Creek and Running Creek continue to remain under threat, they said.

Residents of Taggerty, Acheron, Snobs Creek and Eildon were also on alert. Some fires would take weeks to contain, authorities said, and it could also take weeks to formally identify some of those killed.

Other teams were working to clear debris from towns gutted over the weekend to allow those lucky enough to escape a chance to return to their properties.

Among the survivors, families sat in dazed disbelief, surrounded by mattresses, dogs and whatever meagre possessions they managed to gather as they fled the fires.

Some talked of friends who had lost children, brothers and sisters, kids who have lost best friends and of a woman who has not seen her husband since Saturday. They said they had no warning before daylight turned to night and their communities were enveloped in a wall of fire and smoke.

Teams of disaster victim identification experts were flying in from all over Australia. Extra fire crews were being sent from interstate. Rudd offered army troops to help firefighters control the fires.

He and state Premier John Brumby have also opened up 10 million dollars in emergency funding to deal with the crisis. (ANI)