Supreme Court tells states and UTs to submit plans for implementing minimum ICU standards
The Facts
- The Supreme Court directed all states and Union Territories to prepare action plans to implement minimum standards for intensive care units.
- The matter was heard by a bench of Justices Ahsanuddin Amanullah and R. Mahadevan.
- The court was informed that a consensus-based document titled "Guidelines for Organisation and Delivery of Intensive Care Services" had been prepared as a practical minimum standard for ICUs and was to be shared with states and UTs.
- The court directed the additional chief secretaries or secretaries heading health and medical education departments in states and UTs to convene expert meetings within one week.
- The states and UTs were told to identify and prioritise five essential manpower and equipment requirements in the first stage of implementation.
- The court set a three-week timeline for completing the exercise and called for a compliance and monitoring mechanism.
- The order is part of a broader court-monitored effort to standardise ICU and critical care services across the country, with implementation now left to states and UTs through practical plans.
Context
What exactly did the Supreme Court ask states and UTs to do?
The court asked them to prepare practical action plans to implement minimum ICU standards, convene expert meetings within a week, identify five priority requirements, and complete the exercise within three weeks Economic Times,Business Standard,Tribune.
What guidelines are these plans supposed to implement?
They are based on a consensus document called the "Guidelines for Organisation and Delivery of Intensive Care Services," which the court was told is practical, implementable, and necessary as a minimum standard for ICUs Economic Times,Business Standard,NewsDrum.
What remains unresolved after this order?
The order sets the process and deadlines, but the actual content of each state's plan, which five requirements each jurisdiction prioritises first, and how compliance will be monitored are still to be worked out and reported back to the court ThePrint,Tribune,ETGovernment.com.
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