| Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | ||||||
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Resident doctors on strike Ajay Naik Introduction Altruism - the basis of medicine This altruistic instinct is innate, it is not thrust upon the medical student during his curriculum. It appears unobtrusively, sometimes unknowingly, when the person is involved in patient care. This commitment towards others is occasionally appreciated and sometimes commented upon by others but does not evince a second thought from the person himself. He usually considers it as natural behaviour requiring no special acknowledgement. The frequent encounter with life-and-death situations, experiences with health, social and financial problems of the diseased and their relatives necessarily humbles a person in the face of the vagaries of the system and nature at large. Why do doctors strike? The issues which precipitate a doctors’ strike are generally forgotten in the vociferous reactions and threats of the authorities. The lay public is aghast at the very idea of a strike. The general feeling is that a member of this noble profession should never indulge in any such activity. This very cross of ‘noble profession’ has been the bane of the healers over the past millennia. The moment a person has been elevated to a demi- god status by the people, he loses all his rights and aspirations towards a life of reasonable contentment and comfort. There are other essential services which, when stopped, bring society to a grinding halt. There are the labourers entrusted with the conservancy services run by municipal corporations or governments who, on striking work, represent a much wider threat to health with the spectre of epidemics hanging by a thread, but they are given the Nelson’s eye. It is only when doctors stand up for their rights that there is a wildfire reaction and condemnation by the authorities and ministers with their holier- thanthou attitude. Injustice done to resident doctors With the primary objective of patient care hovering in their minds 24 hours a day, their initial thoughts regarding personal suffering never surface above the subconscious. The very fact that before the present stike they persisted with attempts using bureaucratic channels for a period of over 8 months to make their problems and grievances known to the authorities implies that their problems were very real and tangible for anyone who cared to see. But the root of the entire quagmire was the extreme reluctance of the bureaucratic machinery to take the matter seriously and bring it to an expedient conclusion. The entire tangle reached such ridiculous proportions that the chief secretary of the cabinet gave a statement which expressed their inability to take preventive action or solve any problem. Apparently, only striking from work elicits a semblance of reaction from those in power. This Catch- 22 situation understandably is a cause of much consternation to the resident doctors who, if it could be avoided, would never have gone on strike and would never have drawn themselves away from their patients. Why are resident doctors discriminated against? So, where does it all end? For a person who could have gone abroad after graduation but stayed back to serve our people while being with them, the situation is infuriating. Being treated as a second grade citizen abroad suddenly becomes a very welcome prospect when compared to the crass treatment meted out at home by our own people. Whatever else the western culture lacks in comparison to ours it more than makes up for it by appreciating the dignity of labour. If this state of affairs is to continue in the future, I do not think that eyebrows need be raised when another professional degree holder migrates towards greener pastures due west. Ajay Naik,Senior Resident, Department of Cardiology, Seth G S Medical College and KEM Hospital, Parel, Bombay 400 012.
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