Covid-19 patients killed by exploding oxygen cylinder in Turkey

At least 10 people have died after an oxygen cylinder exploded at an intensive care unit treating Covid-19 patients in Turkey, the health minister said.

The state-run Anadolu news agency said the fire took place at the private Sanko University hospital in Gaziantep, which is about 40 miles north of the country’s border with Syria. It cited a hospital statement identifying the victims as being between 56 and 85. The fire was quickly brought under control.

All the victims were patients who had been hospitalised with coronavirus. The statement said 14 intensive-care patients had been transferred to other hospitals. An investigation is under way.

“We are profoundly saddened by this tragedy,” the Turkish health minister, Fahrettin Koca, said before a planned visit to the hospital.

The governor’s office said 19 patients had been in the unit when a high-pressure oxygen device exploded at 4.45am (1.45GMT). Other than the fatalities, no others were injured in the fire, it said.

Intensive care units across Turkey now have 74% bed occupancy rate as a result of the coronavirus outbreak, according to government figures, although medical associations say the figure is higher and that their hospitals are overrun with Covid-19 patients.

Turkey’s health ministry reported 26,410 new coronavirus cases on Friday, bringing the country’s total since March to 1.98 million. The figure includes asymptomatic cases, which Ankara did not report in the four months up to late November, prompting criticism that the government was trying to hide the extent of the country’s outbreak.

Turkey also reported a record daily high of 246 Covid-19 related deaths on Friday, taking its total to 17,610.

source: theguardian.com