An elevator crashed at Mayo Hospital on Thursday, injuring 10 nurses, eight of whom had numerous limb and head injuries.
After a year, the orthopedic department lift collapsed when nurses were celebrating their last day of training at a multi-story building party.
Two nurses had significant head injuries and five had multiple limb fractures, according to sources.
They alleged the neurosurgeon was absent when the injured nurses were brought to the emergency rooms. At this, injured nurses’ coworkers opposed the institute’s administration.
An official said that the lift collapsed when its pulleys got loose, resulting in serious injuries to nurses.
The protesting nurses demanded immediate attention from Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz to the incident occurring in the largest public sector hospital that was already facing administrative and financial problems.
Some senior medical teachers of the hospital blamed an official for the incident, saying that he was a clinician while the post was designated for an officer with administrative experience.
They said the official had failed to ensure implementation of the standard operating procedures (SOPs) as the lift was meant to carry a specific number of persons at a time, but there was no one to guide the nurses in this regard.
A senior doctor alleged there were multiple complaints against the AMS Works when 73 air-conditioners installed in different wards of the hospital were found non-functional last August.In 2019, a teenager had died after being trapped in an elevator in the hospital, after which a four-member inquiry committee was constituted to probe the incident. Sources said the committee only met twice, and the case was dumped.
Mayo Hospital Chief Operating Officer (COO) Prof. Faisal Masood said the unfortunate incident took place at a time when he was invited as chief guest to a function organized in the orthopedic department for the nursing students marking the last day of their training.
He confirmed that the lift operator was not present there to guide the students with regard to the lift’s capacity.
Five of the students suffered multiple fractures, the COO said, adding that a committee has been constituted to probe the incident and fix responsibility.
To a question about the alleged appointment of the AMS Works against merit, he didn’t comment.
Prof. Masood said that the hospital had decided to make it mandatory for the lift operators to sit in the elevator, and any violation in this regard would be punished strictly.