Rohan Aggarwal is 26-years-old and not due to complete his medical training until next year. And yet, at one of the best hospitals in India, he is the doctor who must decide who will live and who will die when patients come to him gasping for breath, their family members begging for mercy.
As India's healthcare system teeters on the verge of collapse during a brutal second wave of the novel coronavirus, Aggarwal makes those decisions during a 27-hour workday that includes a grim overnight shift in charge of the emergency room at his New Delhi hospital.
Everyone at Holy Family Hospital - patients, relatives and staff - knows there are not enough beds, not enough oxygen or ventilators to keep everyone who arrives at the hospital's front gates