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Elderly woman bitten by snake, carried 8 kms on bamboo stretcher in Pune

A 65-year-old woman bitten by a snake in a small hamlet here having no proper road had to be carried on a makeshift stretcher by locals for over two hours to cover a distance of eight km to get her medical help, her relatives said on Thursday.

PTI Edited by: PTI Pune Updated on: December 05, 2019 13:17 IST
No road, 65-year-old woman bitten by snake carried 8 km on
Image Source : PTI/FILE

No road, 65-year-old woman bitten by snake carried 8 km on bamboo stretcher in Pune

A 65-year-old woman bitten by a snake in a small hamlet here having no proper road had to be carried on a makeshift stretcher by locals for over two hours to cover a distance of eight km to get her medical help, her relatives said on Thursday. A stretcher was made out of "bedsheets and bamboo logs" to carry Barkabai Sangle from her house at Chandar village in Maharashtra's Pune district on Tuesday, her son Babu Sangle told PTI.

Later, after being provided primary treatment at a health centre in Khanapur village, the woman was admitted to the government-run Sassoon General Hospital in Pune city where she is currently undergoing treatment, he said. Babu Sangle, who works in Surat, said his mother was bitten by a snake near her house in a village here on Tuesday afternoon.

"As there is no proper road, no vehicle can ply to our village. So my brother and other locals, without wasting any time, took her on the makeshift stretcher till they reached a proper road near Panshet dam after over two hours," he said. From Panshet, the woman was taken in a private jeep to a primary health centre in Khanapur, located another 15 km away, where doctors gave her first aid and referred her to the Sassoon Hospital, he said.

She was then taken to the city-based hospital in an ambulance on Tuesday night, he added. A resident of Chandar village said there is no road for almost seven to eight km from their place.

There was a 'kaccha' road (dirt road) but it got washed away completely during rains this year, he said. "Since there is no means of transportation, during emergencies, people have no option but to carry the ailing persons on a makeshift stretcher and walk almost eight km, while covering a difficult terrain amid the Sahyadri range, to reach the road," he said, on condition of anonymity..

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