These Muslim Covid Warriors helped Hyderabad in overcoming Oxygen crisis

Patients at the gate of a hospital supported by SDIF | Picture: SDIF

Relief organizations of Hyderabad, run by Muslims, have come to the rescue of the state and offered help to fight the shortage of Oxygen. A TCN Ground Report features some of them. 

 


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Nikhat Fatima | TwoCircles.net

Amid a surge in Covid-19 cases in Hyderabad in the southern Indian state of Telangana and rise in deaths due to the virus, the severe shortage of oxygen, ventilators and beds in both the government and private-run hospitals exposed the shortfalls of the healthcare system of the state.

 

Reports said that many patients were turned away from the hospitals due to a shortage of beds and died in their homes. Those admitted to the hospitals died due to lack of oxygen supply and delay in oxygen tankers reaching them. This lead to hundreds of deaths in Hyderabad alone. 

 

Reports also said that hospitals were overcharging Covid-19 patients. These factors contributed to many people choosing to opt for home treatment. 

 

It was then that the relief organizations of the state, run by Muslims, came to the rescue and offered help to fight the shortage of Oxygen. 

 

Talking to TwoCircles.net, Shiba Minai, an activist said, “I make at least 50 to 60 calls to get a bed for a patient”. 

 

Shiba helps people by connecting them with groups, hospitals and organizations that have been helping patients with beds and oxygen facilities. 

 

Shiba has been doing relief work since the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic by providing food for the homeless, migrants, poor people in the slums. She has also helped with the funeral services of the victims. 

 

She said that a lot of people reach out to her during crisis time. To help these desperate families, she would seek financial help from friends and family members. 

 

“I get calls from people who are unable to find a bed or oxygen if they are already in the hospital or are under home treatment. Then, I call up hospitals and once I get the right hospital, I then connect the patient or the attendant to that hospital,” she said.  

 

Shiba said the work she does is exhausting. “Making several calls to hospitals that want to know how much can the patient be able to pay and meanwhile handling calls from attendants of patients is taxing,”. 

 

Talking about an incident wherein a 45-year-old woman whose saturation levels dipped low and her family could not find a hospital with a bed, Shiba said that she tried her best but “the hospitals refused to admit her after coming to know that her oxygen levels were quite low and she had fewer chances of survival.”

 

The family of the patient roamed to 6 hospitals, who earlier had assured of the availability of bed refused to admit her once they saw the saturation levels. The woman was taken home where she later succumbed. 

 

“I tried to help this lady from 9 p.m. till the wee hours of the morning when it was time for Suhoor (early morning meal during the Muslim month of Ramadan). Sadly, she could not be saved,” Shiba said in a sad tone. 


Although Shiba has helped sixty persons with beds with oxygen facilities, what makes her sad is that the “number of patients who I could not help is higher than the ones I helped.” 

 

Shiba is not alone in doing Covid-19 relief work. Like her, several organizations have helped Hyderabad overcome the Covid-19 crisis from the last year. This year too they have come forward to battle the oxygen shortage in the state. 

 

‘Oxygen on Wheels’

Mohammed Asif Hussain Sohail, the chairperson of Sakina Foundation, who is popularly known as the ‘Hyderabad Hunger Warrior’ for feeding the hungry for more than 10 years, has been receiving close to 200 calls every day from patients who are being treated at home. He also gets calls from hospitals especially Osmania and Gandhi General Hospitals requesting him for oxygen facilities. 

 

“The price of oxygen cylinders is quite high at Rs 30,000 and the cost of refilling has gone up to Rs 2500 which a common man cannot afford,” Sohail said.  

Md Asif Hussain Sohail of Sakina Foundation

Sohail said that as hospitals are running out of oxygen and due to black marketing, he has to verify if the patient needs oxygen or not before helping. 

 

“Sometimes, they don’t need oxygen and we have to counsel and advise them not to give in to their fear and explain to them that a needier person requires it more,” he explained.

 

Sohail claims that he has “spent more than Rs 10 lakhs from his pocket to buy cylinders and send them to the homes of the needy.” 

 

“Every day, in Hyderabad itself, my Foundation has provided more than 200 free cylinders. We have reached out to at least 2000 people so far,” he said. 

 

Oxygen on Wheels is another initiative of the Sakina Foundation. As part of this initiative, oxygen cylinders are provided to patients who are on their way to the city for treatment from their towns and villages. 

 

“Many people were dying on the way to Hyderabad. Not being able to get proper treatment in their villages they would travel to advanced hospitals in the city. The patients would only be saved if they arrived on time and if the hospital had oxygen,” he said. 

 

“I wanted to save lives so I came up with this idea to provide emergency oxygen cylinders on the highway,” Sohail said.

 

As soon as they receive an SOS call, his volunteers drive to the spot where the patient is and help him/her with the oxygen. 

 

Sohail said that they have driven up to 200 kilometers to provide oxygen to a patient on the highway.  

 

“Patients were coming not just from the districts of Telangana state but also from Bhopal, Maharashtra, Karnataka. We met them all on the highway and immediately helped them with the oxygen if their saturation levels were low,” Sohail said, adding, “Nearly 150 persons were helped on the highway.”

 

Sohail said that “love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries.” “Without it, humanity cannot survive,” he added. 

 

700 people given oxygen aid by Helping Hand Foundation

With the oxygen crisis in the state, volunteers of the relief organization Helping Hand Foundation (HHF), headed by Mujtaba Aksari, have been at the forefront. 

 

The group distributed a flyer with their contact numbers for people to seek help in cases of Covid-19 emergency. The group also provide help with giving decent funeral services to Covid-19 victims deaths irrespective of religion. 

 

Mohammed Fareedullah, who heads the project told TwoCircles.net, “When we receive a call for help, our doctors consult them online and based on the doctor’s recommendation, if the patient needs oxygen, we advise the attendant to come to our godown and take the oxygen cylinder without paying any advance or rent. 

A patient receiving oxygen help from HHF | Photo by HHF

Fareedullah said that the families of the patients just have “to pay the refilling charges.” 

 

“The plant where we get the cylinders refilled have begun to charge double of what they used to charge earlier. But we charge the people a nominal amount,” he said.  

 

 “The cylinders provided by HHF are usually for home patients but if the patient develops complications and their saturation level drops despite the oxygen therapy then we help them reach the hospital where again our counsellors in the hospital help them with other needs. When the patient recovers and is discharged we ferry them home in HHF ambulances. If they do not recover the volunteers help the family with the last rites too,” explained Fareedullah. 

 

Helping Hands Foundation owns about 15 ambulances which are free for all patients. The group has 100 cylinders and a luggage trolley to transport the cylinders to the houses of people who cannot come to their go down.

 

To date, HHF claims to have helped more than 700 people covering the entire old city and many other localities.  

 

Humanity First Foundation: from feeding hungry to procuring Oxygen

Mohammed Shujatullah, founder of relief organization Humanity First Foundation has been feeding patients and their attendants at three government hospitals for the last 5 years. 

 

One day when Shujatallah received a call requesting help with oxygen, he decided to buy cylinders and give them for free to patients and then refill the empty ones and help whoever needed them. “Prices had doubled for both the oxygen cylinders and for refilling but through donations to Humanity First, I continued helping people every day with the 110 cylinders we have,” he said. 

Md Shujatullah of Humanity First Foundation checking oxygen cylinders | Photo by HFF

His organization has an ambulance, which carries the oxygen cylinders to hospitals and homes of patients. 

 

In the month of Ramadan, Shujatallah said that his foundation received good donations and he managed to help as many people as was possible for him. 

 

‘Our motive to save lives keeps us going’

Another local initiative known as Social Data Initiative Forum (SDIF) founded by Azam Khan and Khalid Saifullah started oxygen services during the first wave of the pandemic with their stock of 15 cylinders. 


During the second wave, as the oxygen crisis has only gone worse, the group has been adding to their stockpile of oxygen cylinders. 

 

The founders said that they had to pay more than the normal price for both purchasing and refilling the cylinders. 

 

“Our services are not restricted to just providing oxygen cylinders. We also set up an oxygen bank at Government notified Covid-19 hospitals where usually the poorest of the poor come to access health care. People from the rural parts come to Hyderabad with hopes of quality treatment and they face a lot of hurdles waiting to get admitted after already having travelled a long distance,” Azam Khan said. 

 

“The waiting period at the hospital and the travel time further delays the process of the treatment, which is why we opted to help in the government hospitals,” he clarified. 

 

In Gandhi Hospital alone, which is the largest Covid-19 hospital of Hyderabad, Azam Khan said they have “20 oxygen cylinders in circulation which are serving at least 400 patients per day.” 

 

“This supply of oxygen is crucial to their recovery,” Khalid added. 

 

Apart from the 20 cylinders, they have 100 more cylinders at the other two government-run Covid-19 hospitals of Hyderabad. 

 

They said they have helped more than 100 people so far. 

 

Azam Khan narrated an experience that made them realise the significance of their work. 

 

The King Kothi Government hospital had requested SDIF to set up an oxygen bank. 

 

“I felt we had to start the work immediately and even though it was Sunday, our team went to the hospital. As soon as we reached the hospital, we saw four dead bodies being carried away. We were told the hospital had run out of oxygen causing the death of these four persons. We immediately set up our oxygen cylinders. Later the doctors informed us that our timely help had saved three persons who were critical and would not have survived had we not reached on time. This experience both saddened us and also made us feel happy that we could at least save the lives of other three persons,” he said.  

 

“Our motive to save lives keeps us going,” the duo said.

 

The SDIF is helped by two other charity organizations from Hyderabad namely Safa Baitul Maal and Access Foundation, who work in close collaboration with them. 

 

Pre and post-Covid care given by Al Hamd Foundation

Al Hamd Foundation, a charitable trust that helps widows, students and the poor, took up Covid-19 relief operations during the last year’s lockdown. 

 

Amid the ongoing second wave, the foundation is continuing with online consultations of patients with doctors. 

 

When patients contact them online, they are connected to doctors who advise home treatment keeping in view the severe crunch in the hospitals and also the fact that many cases can be treated at home with proper medications and care.

Al Hamd Foundation Covid relief services

The foundation has provided home treatment to fifty-two patients, who had reported low oxygen levels. 

 

The founder of Al Hamd Abdul Azeem Mohammed told TwoCircles.net that the treatment cost they incurred for each patient would have run up to Rs. 7 to 8 lakhs had they been treated in a hospital. 

 

“The team of AL Hamd ensures that the patient does not panic and develops a strong will to fight the disease and survive. The team also helps with the oxygen cylinders, the medicines and regular monitoring by the doctor who visits the patient. At times when the patients are poor and the team notices that they need provisions apart from the medical assistance, Al Hamd provides the family members with rations as well,” Azeem said. 

 

Al Hamd has given 300 oxygen cylinders and 6 oxygen concentrators to other organizations that are helping people affected with Covid-19. 

 

They have four oxygen hubs and seven ambulances in Hyderabad-Secunderabad and a fifth one is coming up soon.  

 

“We have ordered 25 oxygen concentrators from the UK which is likely to arrive by in the last week of May. Each oxygen concentrator of 5-6 litres costs around Rs 46,000. We have also ordered 5 C PAP machines that cure respiratory disorders. And since we are not a hospital, we intend to donate these C PAP machines to the hospitals where there are facilities to treat patient with respiratory disorders that are linked to Covid” explained Azeem. 

 

“We also give post-Covid care by giving immunity-boosting drugs and foodstuff,” he added. 

 

Al Hamd is run with funds from family and close friends. 

 

50-bed oxygen therapy centre set up by Jamaat-e-Islami Hind 

Well-known socio-religious organization Jamaat-e-Islami Hind (JIH) Telangana has also set up a 50-bed oxygen therapy centre in Wadi-e-Huda near Shaheen Nagar, Hyderabad. JIH’s sister concern Students Islamic Organisation (SIO) supports recycling the cylinders, rifling them, coordinating with other organisations for availability. 

 


Post Script

To support Helping Hand Foundation, you can make a GooglePay donation here: 8125203286

 

Donate to Humanity First Foundation here: https://www.donatekart.com/humanity-first/Help-Shujatullah

 

To help SDIF reach out to more needy persons, donate here: 

https://www.donatekart.com/SDIF/Help-SDIF

 

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