Increase font size Decrease font size Reset font size

Hospitals opt for silence on govt directive seeking audit report

By Faiza llyas 2023-12-03
KARACHI: Despite passage of considerable time and several reminders, not a single health institution, including those getting government grants amounting to billions of rupees over the years, has submitted its audit report or details about its cost structures yet, it emerged on Saturday.

Sources said that the caretaker provincial government had initially issued a letter to 19 charitable health facilities on Aug 23 this year,directing them to get their accounts audited by a reputable firm.

No response, however, was received from these institutions in more than three months, the sources added.

The letter, they said, was followed by several reminders.

Last month, the health department had sent a letter to 17 public and private sector institutions, seeking details about the costs they incurred on different medical procedures, their salary structure and per day cost of hospitalisation in the intensive care unit or general ward. Yet, there was no response.

The department, the sources said, responded to their `silence` by requesting the director general of audit in writing to conduct a `forensie audit` of last three years of five institutions in the first phase.

These institutions are: Pir Syed Abdul Qadir Shah Jeelani Institute of Medical Sciences Gambat, Institute of Medical Sciences Jacobabad, Institute of Medical ScienceShahdadpur,SindhInstitute of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences Hyderabad and Sindh Institute of Advanced EndoscopyGastroenterology Karachi.

No improvement in healthcare According to the sources, the government allocation for charitable health institutions alone currently stands around Rs89 billion.

This year, they said, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) government increased the health budget by 10 per cent to Rs272.16bn. This included enhanced grant-in-aid amounting to billions of rupees to severalinstitutions.

However, they said, the government never subjected these institutions to any financial scrutiny or accountability exercise to ensure transparency and better use of public funds.

Resultantly, the government strategy to give away a large chunk of the budget amount every year to certain institutions failed to bring about any improvement in the state of healthcare in the province, they added.

`It seems that people are waiting for the caretaker set-up to complete its term and leave. But, the exercise has exposedlapsesin the system and one hopes that the new government would look into this matter and ensure transparency,` said a senior health department official.

The institutions asked to furnish an audit report and details of cost structures included the National Institute of Cardiovascular Disease, Sindh Institute of Urologyand Transplantation, Sindh Institute of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Sindh Integrated Emergency Health Services, National Institute of Blood Diseases, Pir Abdul Qadir Shah Jeelani Institute of Gambat, Shahadapur Institute of Science, Syed Abdullah Shah Institute of Medical Sciences.

Other institutions included the Kidney Centre, Indus Hospital, Rahmatullah BenevolentTrust, Marie Adelaide Leprosy Centres (Sindh), Benazir Shaheed Model Addiction Treatment and Rehabilitation Centre, Pakistan National Forum on Women`s Health, The Cancer Foundation, ChildLife Foundation, Trust Fatimid Foundation, KashifIqbalThalassaemia Centre, Patients Aid Foundation, Patients Welfare Association, Women & Children Medical Care Trust, PreenRasool Thalassemia Care Trust (Qasimabad, Hyderabad), Afzaal Memorial Thalassaemia Foundation, Agha Welfare Trust (Sindh), Integrated Emergency Health Services, Children ofAdam, Fatimyah Hospital, Haemophilia Welfare Society, International Centre for Chemical and Biological Sciences, Infectious Diseases Hospital and Ziauddin Group of Hospitals.