Doctors say not many youngsters have needed critical care yet for coronavirus. (File)
New Delhi: States have reserved more than double the COVID-19 hospital beds for children than recommended by experts out of fear of being under-prepared, government data shows, although doctors say not many youngsters have needed critical care yet.
The Health Ministry also said on Monday that only 5-10 per cent of all those people infected in the country have sought hospitalisation, compared with 20-23 per cent during the last major wave. Authorities say most people have shown no or mild symptoms and have recovered quickly at home.
The country reported 179,723 new cases on Monday, taking the total to 35.7 million, the highest in the world after the US. Deaths rose by 146 to 483,936, only behind the tally of the US and Brazil.
Data showed that India has more than 24,000 paediatric ICU beds, compared with a recommendation of fewer than 10,000 beds from a central taskforce. Similarly, there are 64,796 non-ICU beds for children, much higher than the suggested 27,682.
Since the last major infection wave in the country starting April, the Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College and Hospital (JLNMCH) in Bihar has kept aside 16 ICU beds for children affected by COVID-19.
"None of the beds has been occupied since the beginning, but we have reserved them in case the third wave affects kids," Raj Kamal Choudhary, associate professor of medicine at the hospital with some 800 total beds, told news agency Reuters.
"States are scared and prepared because kids below 15 years have not been vaccinated. I support the decision of states to have more beds ready than recommended," he said.
There is no centralised public data on how many children have needed hospital care due to COVID-19 in India, but countries such as the US and Britain have seen a rise in hospitalisation in children due to the fast-spreading Omicron variant.
India has some 139,000 COVID-19 ICU beds in total, compared with 195,390 recommended. Oxygen-supported beds, which ran short during the second wave last year, have increased to nearly 495,000, still lower than over 519,000 suggested by experts.
Basic isolation beds, however, are a plenty at more than a million.