Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - A fire broke out in a requisitioned hotel in COVID-19, killing seven people. Is the life of the rescued person in danger?

A fire broke out in a requisitioned hotel in COVID-19, killing seven people. Is the life of the rescued person in danger?

A fire broke out in a hotel in southern India, which was requisitioned by the Indian government to isolate COVID-19 patients. A fire broke out in the hotel because of a short circuit in the wire. According to Indian local media reports, this hotel has treated about 50 patients with COVID-19 epidemic, 7 of whom have been confirmed dead, and several others are seriously injured and taken to hospital for emergency treatment. Other patients have been safely sent to a nearby hospital for treatment and isolation. The local government said that as several people were seriously injured, the death toll may continue to increase, and these rescued people are still in danger. Coupled with the shortage of basic medical materials in hospitals,

The epidemic situation in COVID-19 is not optimistic. India has more new infections in a single day than the United States, and the total number of infections is also among the highest in the world. The Indian government has also taken various control measures, such as closing the city, resulting in many enterprises being forced to stop work without employees, countless overseas orders being cancelled, and nearly 10,000 engineering projects being shelved. Many Indian citizens are still starving because they have no jobs. If the epidemic is not effectively controlled, many Indian citizens will starve to death. Therefore, the Indian government should now.

There is a shortage of medical supplies in India. Many citizens can't buy formal medical masks at all, so they can only cover their faces with rags. These measures have no effect on preventing the epidemic. Many confirmed patients have not been isolated in time, and some patients have lost contact, and these people are likely to wander around the city, which increases the difficulty of epidemic prevention and control. The Indian government also turned to the United States and other developed countries for help, but the economic development of these countries was also affected by the epidemic, and they did not have much financial resources to support other countries.