
Staff crunch at PGI test counters adds to patients' woes
In the New OPD Building of the PGIMER, tests are conducted from 8 am to 1pm and on a daily basis about 7,000 blood samples are collected. In room No. 25, there are three medical record technicians dealing on an average with over 1,500 patients.
One has to follow a tedious process to get their tests done in PGI. Firstly, the patient stands in the queue at counter No. 6,7 or 23, 24 for tests' payment. On counter No. 23 that is for payment of X-ray, ultrasound, CT scan and MRI, there is one worker accepting payment for male, female, senior citizens and PGI staff categories that have separate lines. Due to one person accepting all payments, different lines often get merged up and senior citizens suffer the most due to the chaotic situation.
Ranjit Kaur, 60, who had come from Gurdaspur for her back pain, couldn't find a line for senior citizens at counter No. 23 as she wanted to make payment for her MRI test.
Due to the limited time-frame for tests at PGIMER i.e. 8 am to 1pm, patients start gathering outside the sample collection room and payment counters from 6 am onwards. After making the payment for blood sample tests at counter no. 6 or 7, the patient has to stand in another line at room no. 25 where barcodes with patient names are generated. To get the barcodes, patients wait for almost 2 hours and it can increase depending on the rush. Having received the barcode, patients stand in another line to give samples. The entire process consumes 3-4 hours.
Though it is not compulsory to get one's tests done inside PGIMER, due to authentic results and on doctor's insistence patients tend to get them done at the institute only.
Tara Devi, 42, standing in line for her 55-year-old relative, said, 'I have been standing in line since 8.30 am and more than one-and-a-half hour has passed but it looks like the line is not moving'. Another attendant, Aiysha, standing in line for her mother, said, 'I have been standing in line since 8 am for my mother who got an eye stroke. A few women came later and stood in front of us due to which our turn came very late'.
Director of PGIMER Dr Vivek Lal said, 'Though on all 52 sanctioned posts of medical record technicians, outsourced workers have been hired, we'll see if we can increase their number. In addition, we are keenly following the computer upgrade work so that things get automated and people don't have to stand in queues for registration and other things,'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
3 hours ago
- Indian Express
Does watching reels have the same effect as alcohol on the brain? Neurologist explains a new study
Is watching short videos in between your workday dulling your brain and building addictive behaviour similar to alcohol and substance abuse? Worse, it may rewire the brain, which adapts to the instant gratification and constant novelty, leading to impulsive decisions. 'Short-form video addiction is a global public health threat with users in China spending 151 minutes daily on average, and 95.5 per cent of internet users engaged. This high-intensity 'instant reward' consumption not only impairs attention, sleep and mental health but also increases depression risk,' said study author Qiand Wang, a professor of psychology at Tianjin Normal University. Other research has shown how short-form videos can negatively impact attention spans, cognitive skills and even short-term memory. 'Since these are rapid-fire in nature, the brain seems overwhelmed in processing them. Short videos deliver high dopamine experiences with minimal effort, which can overstimulate the brain's reward pathways, the circuits which are also involved in addictive substances. Over a period of time, this can reduce sensory, natural rewards and increase impulsive behaviour,' says Dr Praveen Gupta, chairman, Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro & Spine (MAIINS), Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram. How are short videos addictive? Habitual usage of short videos has been linked to reduced attention capacity. Because reels serve up constant novelty, you flit from moment to moment seeking novelty than doing some deep-focussed thinking. As short videos are of varied content, there is frequent context-switching. This can impair the brain's prefrontal cortex, which guides our thoughts, behaviours and emotions based on the information it receives. Scrolling can affect its ability to hold and manipulate the information due to constant switching. MRI studies have shown that increased screen usage in adolescents correlated with a thinner cortex. Since the prefrontal cortex is still developing in our mid-20s, short-form videos can distort our sense of judgment and regulation of information. How do short videos impact sleep? Night-time screen exposure, especially those linked with emotionally-arousing content, disrupts circadian rhythm or the body's sleep-wake cycle. This affects the hippocampus, the part of the brain responsible for learning and memory. The hippocampus is crucial for forming new memories. It is also a temporary storage area, where short-term memories are transferred to long-term memories. The hippocampus plays a key role in navigating our surroundings, remembering routes and understanding spatial relationships. Can scrolling be compared to alcohol addiction? While there is no direct scientific measure that equates brain damage from these videos with that from alcohol or tobacco, both alcohol and nicotine have been associated with direct neurotoxic effects, which these videos are also causing. Pinching short videos floods the brain's reward system with a dopamine hiss, training it to crave constant novelty. Over a period of time, this erodes sustained attention and reshapes neural pathways in ways similar to addictive substances, especially in younger brains which are still under maturation. While it is not the same as chemical brain damage from alcohol or nicotine, the long-term rewiring of motivation and focus is a real concern.


Hindustan Times
11 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Chandigarh: 322 houses vacant but PGI staff await allotment
As many as 322 government quarters meant for staff at Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) are lying vacant even as 847 employees are in the waitlist for allotment, an RTI has revealed. PGI accommodates its staff in Sector 12 and 24 but due to the long wait list, the employees are having to put up in rented places nearby, often at a high cost. (HT File) The vacant houses include those meant for faculty as well as non-teaching staff, with nursing officers and others belonging to Group B and C having the longest list of employees awaiting house allotment. PGI accommodates its staff in Sector 12 and 24 but due to the long wait list, the employees are having to put up in rented places nearby, often at a high cost. The RTI, filed by Ashwani Munjal, chairperson of the joint action committee of the PGI contractual workers, shows several houses have remained unallotted since 2017. Yet, the house allotment committee (HAC), which is responsible for distributing them, has met only once in 2025, on July 30, after an 11-month gap since its previous meeting in September 2024. During this meeting, chaired by Prof Arun Kumar Aggarwal, 12 houses were allotted. But the orders for recommendation were passed on August 12, ironically the same day when the response to the RTI was provided. The RTI query was filed on July 9. Delay in fitness report from engg dept The major reason behind the delay in house allotment appears to be the irregular meetings of HAC but the engineering department's failure to provide timely fitness reports for each house is equally to be blamed for the backlog. A letter from the estate branch dated June 16, 2025, noted that while the list of vacant houses had been shared with the engineering department, it had not received the fitness reports. Without these, allotments could not be done. Munjal said that this delay was causing a huge loss to the government exchequer. Not only is PGI missing out on the licence fees and monthly rent from allotted houses, but it is also paying 20% of the basic pay as House Rent Allowance (HRA) to eligible staff each month. Despite repeated attempts, PGIMER director Dr Vivek Lal and deputy director administration Pankaj Rai did not comment. The official spokesperson said that a fact-finding exercise would be needed before providing an explanation.


Indian Express
20 hours ago
- Indian Express
323 PGI staff houses lie vacant, causing Rs 5.5 crore annual loss
As many as 323 houses meant for faculty and non-faculty staff of the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGI) in Sectors 12 and 24 have been lying vacant for years, causing an annual financial loss of around Rs 5.5 crore, information obtained under the Right to Information (RTI) Act has revealed. According to the RTI reply, the losses are on account of forgone licence fees and the payment of 20% house rent allowance (HRA) to staff who could have been accommodated in these quarters. Over the last five to six years, the non-allotment of vacant houses has cost PGI more than Rs 20 crore. Applicant Ashwani Kumar Munjal, an honorary member of the PGI Employees' Union (Non-Faculty), said many of these houses have remained unoccupied from 2017 to 2025, even as several employees wait for official accommodation. 'Staff have to rent homes in far-off areas at high rates. This puts a heavy financial burden on them and delays their arrival for duty due to traffic congestion, ultimately affecting patient services,' he said. The RTI reply also shows that many of these houses have been locked up for years, rendering them uninhabitable. While PGI suffers rental losses running into several lakh rupees annually, it continues to incur expenses on the upkeep and security of these properties. Residential accommodation at PGI is primarily meant for faculty, resident doctors, nurses, and other staff. However, due to various reasons — from long-pending repairs to unsuitable location or size — 323 houses remain unallotted. A recent 'fitness report' of the vacant quarters flagged severe issues, including wall cracks, leaking roofs, faulty sewage and plumbing systems, unsafe electrical wiring, and dilapidated doors and windows. These problems have delayed allotment and driven up annual maintenance costs. Meanwhile, demand for on-campus housing remains high, with new doctors and employees often forced to rent costly accommodation outside. Staff representatives say timely repair and maintenance could prevent further financial losses and ease the housing crunch. Proposals under consideration include earmarking a separate repair budget and launching large-scale renovations to bring the locked quarters back into use.