“Why does this keep happening?” — The question India asks after every hospital fire, and still cannot answer.
At approximately 2:30 am on March 16, 2026, a short circuit triggered a fire on the first floor of the Trauma Care Intensive Care Unit of Shri Ram Chandra Bhanj (SCB) Medical College and Hospital in Cuttack, Odisha. Of the 23 patients in the unit at the time, ten did not survive — seven died in the blaze, three more succumbed to burns or suffocation during evacuation. Eleven staff members sustained burn injuries while rescuing patients. It was the worst hospital fire in India since the AMRI Hospital fire in Kolkata in 2011. By afternoon, a judicial inquiry had been ordered. By evening, the country was asking the same question it asks after every hospital fire — and still cannot answer.
👩🏫 SCB Medical College and Hospital: The Institution
Shri Ram Chandra Bhanj (SCB) Medical College and Hospital — named after Maharaja Shri Ram Chandra Bhanj Deo — is Odisha’s largest and oldest government hospital, established in 1944 in Cuttack. It serves as the primary tertiary care referral centre for the entire state and parts of neighbouring Jharkhand, West Bengal, and Chhattisgarh. The hospital is affiliated with Utkal University and runs MBBS, postgraduate, and super-speciality programmes. It is also the designated state-level centre for trauma care, burns, and critical medicine — making the fire in its Trauma Care ICU particularly devastating, as its patients were those least able to evacuate independently.
Cuttack ≠ Odisha’s administrative capital. Cuttack is Odisha’s judicial capital — it is home to the Odisha High Court. Bhubaneswar (approximately 30 km south of Cuttack) is Odisha’s administrative and legislative capital and the seat of the state government. This dual-capital distinction is a high-frequency MCQ trap in geography and state-specific questions.
🌑 What Happened: The Fire’s Sequence
The fire broke out at approximately 2:30–3:00 am on March 16 in the Trauma Care ICU on the first floor of the New Medicine Building. The probable cause confirmed by CM Majhi was a short circuit. The 22-bed ICU had 23 patients at the time — slightly over capacity — all critically ill.
The hospital’s fire safety system was activated and the hospital’s own fire department initiated initial firefighting. Three additional fire engines from the district fire service were called in. Staff began evacuating patients in what was necessarily chaotic — ICU patients are connected to ventilators, drips, and monitoring equipment and cannot move independently. Seven patients died in the fire itself. Three more died during transfer to other wards. Eleven staff members — nurses, ward boys, and attendants — suffered burn injuries during rescue attempts; their efforts are credited with preventing a far higher death toll. The fire was brought under control within approximately 30 minutes.
📌 Government Response and Relief Measures
Judicial Commission of Inquiry: CM Majhi ordered a judicial inquiry under retired District Judge Laxmidhar Biswal, notified through Odisha’s Home (Special Section) Department. The commission has 60 days from gazette notification to submit its report. Its mandate: examine the sequence of events; assess accountability; review emergency preparedness; and recommend preventive measures. Headquarters: Cuttack.
Ex-gratia payments announced:
- ₹25 lakh per deceased — from the Chief Minister’s Relief Fund (CMRF), announced by CM Majhi
- ₹2 lakh per deceased — from the PM National Relief Fund (PMNRF), announced by PM Modi
- ₹50,000 per injured — from the PMNRF
Budget context: CM Majhi noted that ₹320 crore had been allocated in the 2025–26 budget for improving fire safety infrastructure in hospitals, with a further ₹400 crore earmarked for 2026–27. The fire raises sharp questions about whether these allocations have translated into actual safety improvements on the ground — or whether they remain figures in a budget document.
Presidential condolence: President Droupadi Murmu expressed grief in a social media post, calling it a “tragic fire incident.”
Two separate relief funds disbursed ex-gratia in this case: CMRF (Chief Minister’s Relief Fund) — state-level, administered by the Odisha CM — gave ₹25 lakh per deceased. PMNRF (PM National Relief Fund) — central-level, administered by the PM’s office — gave ₹2 lakh per deceased and ₹50,000 per injured. These are different funds with different authorities and different amounts. Mixing them is a common MCQ error.
⚖️ India’s Hospital Fire Safety Framework: The Rules Nobody Enforces
India’s hospital fire safety framework is multi-layered — and its systematic failure is the reason hospital fires continue to kill patients with grim regularity. The problem is not inadequate law; it is absent enforcement.
National Building Code (NBC), 2016: Published by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS), the NBC sets comprehensive standards for fire safety in buildings including hospitals — mandating automatic sprinklers, fire detection and alarm systems, compartmentalisation, and designated escape routes. Compliance is mandatory for new constructions; retrofitting old buildings remains poorly enforced.
Fire NOC (No Objection Certificate): Under state fire safety laws, hospitals above a specified size must obtain a Fire NOC from the state fire department certifying compliance. NOCs must be renewed periodically. In practice, many government hospitals have expired or never-obtained NOCs at the time fires occur.
NABH Accreditation: The National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare Providers (NABH) — an entity under the Quality Council of India — includes fire safety and disaster preparedness as criteria for accreditation. NABH hospitals must conduct fire drills, maintain functional fire suppression equipment, and have documented emergency response plans. Government hospitals frequently lack NABH accreditation.
The enforcement gap: The consistent finding of every post-fire inquiry is the same: fire safety equipment is installed but not maintained; drills are conducted on paper but not in practice; NOC renewals are administrative formalities rather than genuine inspections; and in overwhelmed government hospitals, fire escape routes are frequently obstructed by extra beds placed to handle patient overflow.
NABH (National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare Providers) operates under the Quality Council of India (QCI) — not directly under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. QCI is an autonomous body set up jointly by the Government of India and Indian industry associations. MCQs testing institutional hierarchies often place NABH directly under the Ministry of Health — that is incorrect.
The National Building Code (NBC) 2016 is published by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) — a technical standards body. It is not an Act of Parliament or a central legislation. It is a model building code that states and local bodies are expected to adopt into their building bye-laws. Compliance derives from adoption into local regulation — not directly from NBC itself. MCQs may test whether NBC is a “law” or a “standard.”
| Instrument | Authority | Key Requirement | Enforcement Reality |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Building Code 2016 | Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) | Sprinklers, alarms, fire escapes | Poorly enforced for old buildings |
| Fire NOC | State Fire Department | Periodic certification of compliance | Frequently expired or absent |
| NABH Accreditation | Quality Council of India | Fire drills, suppression equipment, emergency plans | Many govt hospitals lack accreditation |
📜 India’s Hospital Fire Record: A Recurring Tragedy
The SCB fire follows a pattern so consistent that it constitutes a systemic failure rather than a series of accidents: government or private facility, night-time outbreak, short circuit as cause, inadequate suppression systems, chaotic evacuation of immobile ICU patients, and a judicial inquiry whose recommendations are not implemented before the next fire.
- AMRI Hospital, Kolkata (December 2011): The deadliest hospital fire in India’s modern history — 94 patients killed, most from smoke inhalation while trapped in upper-floor ICUs. Basement storage of flammable materials and blocked fire exits were primary causes. Hospital management was later arrested. Nationwide directives followed — most poorly implemented.
- Kamla Nehru Hospital, Bhopal (2021): Eight newborns killed in a fire in the neonatal ICU — short circuit, government hospital.
- Ahmednagar District Civil Hospital, Maharashtra (2021): Ten COVID-19 patients killed in an ICU fire — short circuit, night-time, government hospital.
Each fire produces an inquiry. Each inquiry produces recommendations. The recommendations are not enforced. The cycle repeats.
In most building fires, people can evacuate themselves — they walk or run out. ICU patients cannot. They are connected to ventilators that breathe for them, IV drips that maintain their blood pressure, and monitors that track their vital signs. Disconnecting these devices too quickly can kill; leaving them connected makes evacuation nearly impossible. This is why fire in a hospital ICU is uniquely lethal — and why it requires a completely different level of fire prevention, not just firefighting.
India has a detailed National Building Code, a fire NOC system, and an accreditation framework (NABH) that explicitly covers hospital fire safety. Yet government hospitals keep burning, killing the most vulnerable patients. Is this a failure of laws, institutions, budgets, or political will — and what would it take to actually break the cycle? The Odisha government allocated ₹320 crore for hospital fire safety in 2025–26. Did the Trauma Care ICU at SCB benefit from any of that allocation?
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Cuttack is Odisha’s judicial capital — home to the Odisha High Court. Bhubaneswar (approximately 30 km south) is the administrative and legislative capital and the seat of the state government. This dual-capital distinction is a high-frequency MCQ trap.
SCB stands for Shri Ram Chandra Bhanj — named after Maharaja Shri Ram Chandra Bhanj Deo. The hospital was established in 1944 and is affiliated with Utkal University. It is Odisha’s largest and oldest government hospital.
The CMRF (Chief Minister’s Relief Fund) gave ₹25 lakh per deceased — announced by Odisha CM Mohan Charan Majhi. The PMNRF gave a separate ₹2 lakh per deceased and ₹50,000 per injured. These are two different funds with different authorities and different amounts — do not confuse them.
NABH (National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare Providers) operates under the Quality Council of India (QCI) — not directly under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. QCI is an autonomous body set up jointly by the Government of India and Indian industry associations.
The AMRI Hospital fire in Kolkata in December 2011 killed 94 patients — the deadliest hospital fire in India’s modern history, mostly from smoke inhalation in upper-floor ICUs. The SCB fire (10 dead) is described as the worst hospital fire since AMRI 2011, not the worst ever.