HomeCityHistory repeats in cough syrup horror: Killer drugs claimed 14 lives at Mumbai’s JJ Hospital in 1986

History repeats in cough syrup horror: Killer drugs claimed 14 lives at Mumbai’s JJ Hospital in 1986

MP cough syrup deaths: The case is a grim replay of the 1986 JJ Hospital disaster in Mumbai, where 14 patients, including a 10-year-old child, died after being administered glycerol contaminated with DEG. According

October 07, 2025 / 09:00 IST
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Hospital
Hospital

A spate of child deaths in Madhya Pradesh linked to contaminated cough syrup has exposed a chilling failure to learn from a nearly identical medical tragedy that shocked the nation nearly four decades ago.

In Chhindwara district, at least 14 children have died after consuming ‘Coldrif’ cough syrup, which subsequent tests by Tamil Nadu drug control authorities found contained 48.6% diethylene glycol (DEG). The industrial solvent is a known cause of acute, often fatal, renal failure. The state government has since banned the syrup, announced compensation and launched a probe into the manufacturer, Sresan Pharmaceuticals.

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The case is a grim replay of the 1986 JJ Hospital disaster in Mumbai, where 14 patients, including a 10-year-old child, died after being administered glycerol contaminated with DEG. According to a TOI report, the commission of inquiry led by Justice BS Lentin found the glycerol used then contained 90% DEG.

"The glycerol used at JJ Hospital came from an industrial supplier with no pharmaceutical clearance. It was a lethal oversight," said Dr Ishwar Gilada, who was the resident medical officer at the hospital during the 1986 tragedy. He recalled that Justice Lentin had described the incident as "a tragic monument to neglect,” as cited by TOI.