More than 80 women underwent surgery for laparoscopic tubectomies at a free government-run camp in the central state of Chhattisgarh on Saturday. Of these, about 60 fell ill shortly afterwards, officials in the state said.
Such camps are held
regularly across India as part of a long-running effort to control the emerging
economic power’s booming population.
“Reports of a drop in
pulse, vomiting and other ailments started pouring in on Monday from the women
who underwent surgery,” Sonmani Borah, the commissioner for Bilaspur district
where the camp was held, told AFP news agency. “Since Monday eight women have
died and 64 are in various hospitals.”
Four doctors have been
suspended and police have registered a criminal complaint. Television footage
showed women on stretchers being rushed into hospital with anxious relatives by
their side.
Borah said authorities
would investigate the incident, which took place at the government-run Nemi
Chand hospital in the Pendari area of Bilaspur, 69 miles (110km) from state
capital Raipur. The chief minister of Chhattisgarh, one of India’s poorest
states, has ordered an investigation.
Deaths due to sterilisation
are not a new problem in India, where more than four million of the operations
were performed in 2013-14, according to the government.
Between 2009 and 2012, the
government paid compensation for 568 deaths resulting from sterilisation, the
health ministry said in an answer to a parliamentary question two years ago.
Authorities in eastern
India came under fire last year after a news channel unearthed footage showing
scores of women dumped unconscious in a field following a mass sterilisation. The women had all undergone
surgical procedures at a hospital that local officials said was not equipped to
accommodate such a large number of patients.
The Indian Express daily
said the operations in Chhattisgarh were carried out by a single doctor and his
assistant in about five hours. “There was no negligence. He is a senior doctor.
We will probe [the incident],” the chief medical officer of Bilaspur, RK
Bhange, told the newspaper.
So-called “sterilisation
camps” are held in Chhattisgarh between October and February as part of a
larger programme to control India’s 1.26 billion population. Women who go
through the surgery are given 1,400 rupees (£14) by the state.
Local governments in India
often offer incentives such as cars and electrical goods to women volunteering
for sterilisation.
Government-imposed quotas
and financial incentives for doctors also contribute to problems, encouraging
officials to botch preparations or rush procedures. Medicine within the public
health system in India is often badly prepared, with varying dosages, or is out
of date. Basics such as disinfectant are in short supply and are watered down
to save money. Corruption is rife in the sector.
Health advocates worry that
paying women to undergo sterilisation at family planning camps is dangerous
and, by default, limits their contraceptive choices.
India’s family planning
programme has traditionally focused on women, and experts say that male
sterilisation is still not accepted socially.
“The payment is a form of
coercion, especially when you are dealing with marginalised communities,” said
Kerry McBroom, director of the Reproductive Rights Initiative at the Human
Rights Law Network in New Delhi.
Pratap Singh, commissioner
of Chhattisgarh’s department of health and family welfare, told Reuters that
the state’s sterilisation programme was voluntary.
The state government has
already announced compensation packages of 200,000 rupees for the families of
the women who died and 50,000 rupees for those hospitalised. Payments are
customary in such cases in India.
Two years ago, the police
in the eastern Indian state of Bihar arrested three men after they performed
botched sterilisation surgery without anaesthetic on 53 women over two hours in
a field.
Politicians in the state
are campaigning against “quacks and fake doctors” whom they accuse of causing
many deaths. In a recent incident, a one-year-old girl died after an
unqualified doctor operated on her with a kitchen knife.
No government has
successfully formulated policies to manage India’s population growth which
stands at 1.6% a year, down from a high of about 2.3% in the 1970s.
That decade saw aggressive
sterilisation campaigns which have stigmatised family planning ever since.
India is currently forecast to become the world’s most populous nation in 2030,
with numbers approaching 1.5 billion.
India was the first country
in the world to introduce a population control policy in the 1950s, and has
missed successive objectives ever since.
Though large numbers of
young people can be an economic advantage, a combination of unfulfilled
aspirations, scarce land and water, overcrowding in growing cities as well as
inadequate infrastructure, could lead to social tensions and political
instability.
One major problem is a
gender imbalance, a result of selective abortion of girls. In some communities
there are fewer than eight women for every 10 men, with ratio skewed even
further among younger people.
Guardian

Just hope is not another epidemic like Ebola
ReplyDeleteSounds like the government is deliberately killing them
ReplyDelete