
BJMC hostel and mess buildings to undergo structural stability checks
The impact of the crash was so severe that the pillars of the student mess shifted, and reinforcement bars were left exposed. After Thursday's tragedy, both buildings were completely evacuated. A structural stability report will now determine whether these buildings are fit for repairs or need to be completely demolished and rebuilt.
The project implementation unit (PIU), which oversees the construction of medical buildings in the state, operates as a separate unit under the state's road and buildings department. The construction of the BJMC boys' hostel and mess building on the Civil Hospital premises was also carried out by this unit. These buildings are less than a year old. Despite the damage from the plane crash, the buildings did not collapse completely.
However, they are not in a condition to be used, sources said. Therefore, a structural stability report will be prepared to decide whether to repair or raze the buildings.

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


Time of India
29-07-2025
- Time of India
Air India starts online yoga for stressed crew members; pilots say address real issues
NEW DELHI: Air India has begun conducting 'online yoga' classes for its crew members, including pilots who have been under severe psychological stress post the June 12 Ahmedabad crash. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) had soon after that accident directed major Indian carriers to hold post trauma mental health workshop for their flight crew. AI had reported a 'minor increase' in sick leaves by pilots after AI 171 crash, with 112 reporting sick on June 16. In a recent mail to crew members, AI's safety head Captain Henry Donohoe said: '(AI's wellness app) offers a comprehensive suite of physical and emotional well-being support programmes. These include professional counselling sessions, online yoga classes, guided care circles and reflection sessions. In addition, we encourage you to explore self-care app which provides a wide range of mental health resources, including personalised plans and sessions tailored to individual needs. ' While the same may be aimed at improving crew members' mental wellbeing, large number of AI pilots say the airline needs to take 'concrete steps if it is indeed serious' about the same. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like No annual fees for life UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo 'First of all, AI should revert to printed rosters being emailed to crew members as that allowed them to plan their lives. Now rostering (who will operate which flight when) is on an app which changes constantly. We can't plan our life as we are constantly at the beck and call of the airline. This should immediately change,' said multiple pilots. With rosters on the app, crew members say they have no way to prove that the app earlier had a different flight marked for them which has now been changed. Refusing to operate as per the constantly being updated app-based rostering has consequences. This despite the fact that DGCA after the Ahmedabad crash had directed major airlines 'not to push' crew to come to work if they are not feeling upto it to operate a flight. The reason: Mental health affects physical health, which in turn affects the ability to operate flights safely. In fact, a majority of DGCA notices to AI have been regarding crew scheduling by the airline. AI pilots want weekly off to be given once a week instead of being given after 168 hours or on the eighth day. 'There is no emotional quotient in AI as of now. Everything is app and mail-based. Even for online yoga, there's an app. The stress level is very high in the airline and there's no real support at this difficult time,' said pilots. 'AI has been putting crew members on standby duty whenever it wants, thereby inducing more stress among pilots even though there are required number of standby crew when the flight programme is published. Then there are continuing pay issues with the fix pay being reduced to 40 hours from 70 earlier by only one of them. Our weekly offs are not printed on the rosters. As it is this was causing both mental and financial stress among pilots. The crash has made things even worse,' they said. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays and public holidays . Discover stories of India's leading eco-innovators at Ecopreneur Honours 2025


NDTV
28-07-2025
- NDTV
Air India Crash: Mother Donates Skin To 8-Month-Old For Grafting Surgery
Ahmedabad: For 8-month-old Dhyaansh, the youngest victim of the June 12 Air India plane crash, his mother not only turned a saviour when she rescued him from the on ground crash fire but also provided her skin for grafts to treat his deep burn wounds. The child, who suffered 36 per cent burns, is on the road to recovery as the skin of his mother, who also sustained 25 per cent burns, used for grafts helped in healing his wounds, as per doctors. Skin grafts involve transplanting healthy skin to cover wounds, burns or areas damaged by surgery or disease and promote tissue growth to help a person heal. The infant and his mother have been discharged from a private hospital here following five weeks of intensive treatment and plastic surgery to restore the skin damaged due to fire, doctors said on Monday. The child's own skin along with his mother's skin grafts were used to treat his third-degree burn wounds, said Dr Rutvij Parikh, consultant plastic surgeon at the KD Hospital. When the Air India 171 plane crashed into the BJ Medical College's hostel-cum residential complex here on June 12, Manisha Kachhadiya and her son Dhyaansh were in one of the buildings affected by the crash. Dhyaansh's father Kapil Kachhadiya is pursuing his super-speciality MCh degree course in urology at the BJ Medical College attached with the Civil Hospital. At the time of the crash, he was at the hospital while his wife and son were in their allotted quarter. Both of them suffered burn injuries in the horrific tragedy, which claimed 260 lives, including 241 persons on board the aircraft and others on the ground. The magnitude of the crash and subsequent fire was such that despite being inside a flat, the heat caused burn injuries to Manisha, a homeopath, and Dhyaansh, said Kapil Kachhadiya. He said when the crash occurred, Manisha suffered injuries, but she picked up their son and managed to come out of the building. After taking primary treatment at the Civil Hospital, both were rushed to the KD Hospital the same day in view of their severe burn injuries, said Dr Parth Desai, the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the private medical facility. According to Parikh, Manisha had suffered 25 per cent burns on her arms, face and legs, while the infant suffered 36 per cent burns on his face and other body parts. "Since some wounds were deep due to third-degree burns suffered by both the mother and son, we needed to perform the skin grafting procedure to cover those wounds," he said. "In this procedure, we take a thin layer of skin and graft it on the wound to cover it. The place from where the skin is taken gets healed with time and a new skin eventually covers it," said Parikh. First, Manisha's own skin was grafted to heal her wounds, said Parikh, who performed the surgeries at the KD Hospital. Subsequently, Parikh took the skin of Manisha as well as Dhyaansh to cover his burn injuries, the plastic surgeon said. "To cover Dhyaansh's wounds, we needed more skin because infants do not have much skin on their body. Thus, we used both Manisha and his skin to cover his wounds. Usually, a mother's skin is preferred in such cases," he said. "Both eventually recovered and were discharged a week back after five weeks of intensive treatment," Parikh said. Apart from the mother-son duo, four other patients, all medical students of the BJ Medical College, were treated at the KD Hospital, Desai said. "A total of six patients, including the mother-son duo, were admitted to our hospital after getting injured in the plane crash. Among the four medical students, one had a fracture while another had a facial injury. But, the most complicated case was of this mother-son duo," he added. (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)


India Today
28-07-2025
- India Today
With mother as shield and skin, 8-month-old Air India crash victim survives
Manisha Kachhadiya shielded her eight-month-old son, Dhyaansh, with her body from the flames as Air India's IC171 crashed into BJ Medical College residential quarters in Ahmedabad on June 12, killing 260 people. Despite the searing heat and thick smoke, her only instinct was to protect her infant son, who had turned out to be the youngest survivor of the air crash. Manisha not only shielded Dhyaansh that day, but as both fought burn injuries, the mother gave her skin as a shield to the 8-month-old. In a heart-warming story of survival from the Boeing 787-8 crash in Ahmedabad, Manisha and Dhyaansh were discharged from the hospital last is the son of Manisha and Kapil Kachhadiya, a super-speciality MCh student in urology at BJ Medical College. Kapil was on duty at the hospital when the plane crashed into the hostel on June told PTI that when the plane crashed, Manisha suffered injuries, but her priority was to save their son."There was a blackout for a second and then our residence was filled with heat," Manisha told The Times of India. At that terrifying moment, she grabbed her son and ran. Thick smoke and flames made it nearly impossible to see, and the heat left both mother and child with serious burns."There was a moment I thought we would not make it out. But I had to, for my child. We have both been through pain I cannot put into words," Manish sustained 25% burns to her face and hands. Dhyaansh suffered 36% burns across his face, both arms, chest, and were rushed to KD Hospital, where Dhyaansh was immediately admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU). The infant required ventilator support to breathe, along with fluid resuscitation, blood transfusion, and highly specialised care for his INDIA CRASH AND A MOTHER'S INSTINCTIVE COURAGEThe child's recovery, doctors said, was medically complex due to his of the most crucial parts of his treatment was that when skin grafts were required to help heal his wounds, his mother offered her own. Manisha donated her skin to her son, becoming, quite literally, his shield once Adit Desai, managing director of KD Hospital, described the case as deeply moving."It was deeply touching because of the mother's instinctive courage to save her child. From a medical standpoint, every department came together to ensure the best possible outcome," Desai told The Times of added that the hospital provided free treatment to six patients affected by the AI171 aeroplane surgeon Dr Rutvij Parikh explained to the newspaper how the medical team approached treating the child's burn injuries with the utmost child's own skin and his mother's skin grafts were used to treat the burn wounds. The patient's age was a major factor. We had to make sure the wounds did not get infected and that his growth would be normal. The recovery of the child and mother has been satisfactory."FATHER PLAYED A CRITICAL ROLE IN SON'S RECOVERY TOOThe father, Kapil, himself a medical professional, played a critical role in his son's recovery."Dr Kapil's involvement as a father helped enormously. As a medical professional himself, he often made sure the dressings were done properly, even in the middle of the night," Dr Parikh told The Times of team of doctors who treated the mother and child included Dr Snehal Patel, Dr Tushar Patel, and Dr Mansi Dandnaik, according to the child's condition was complicated by the fact that blood had rushed into one side of his lungs due to the trauma."He was kept on ventilatory support, and an intercostal drainage tube was inserted until we achieved good lung expansion," said Dr Snehal five weeks of intensive treatment and care, both Manisha and Dhyaansh have now been discharged from the hospital. This mother's love defied both fire and fate to save her son's life.- EndsTune InMust Watch