The case made national headlines in a country where a crumbling and often overburdened government health facilities forces many of India’s flourishing and increasingly influential middle classes to seek out expensive private healthcare providers.
The little girl, called Adya, died in September after almost a fortnight at the Fortis Memorial Research Institute (FMRI) in Gurgaon, a satellite city of New Delhi, where she was admitted after catching dengue fever.
Her father Jayant Singh since wrote a long post on social media accusing the hospital of “overcharging, negligence and greed”.
The total cost of treatment was some $24,000, a small fortune in India where the average annual wage is a tenth of that.
“Isn’t it unbelievable that they billed us for 1,500 gloves, 650 syringes… many other items in just about two weeks,” Singh told AFP.
“My seven year daughter died because of the negligence of the top hospitals in India,” he added.
FMRI denied being negligent or overcharging the family, saying the case was complex and required intense treatment.
Nonetheless Preeti Sudan, India’s top health ministry official, ordered the local state government Tuesday to “urgently initiate an enquiry” saying such incidents have an “extremely deleterious impact” on people’s faith in the country’s healthcare system.
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