Indian Journal of Medical Ethics

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Apr-June 2006(2)
FROM THE PRESS
FROM THE PRESS
 First the money, then the discharge

In Bihar, a dalit woman was reportedly held captive for nearly two months by the owner of a private nursing home for non-payment of medical bills. She was freed after her mother filed a complaint with the district magistrate.

Times News Network. Hospital held dalit captive for two months. The Times of India, January 20, 2006.


First the money, then the body

Authorities at the BSES hospital in Andheri, Mumbai, refused to hand over the body of 59-year-old Ghaffur Shaikh, who died in the hospital, until relatives paid the bill. When the patient was brought into the BMC-owned, semi-privatised hospital the family was told that there was no space in the general intensive care unit (costing Rs 200 a day) and they would have to admit him to the private ICU at Rs 3,000 a day. Hospital sources said this was a common practice in the hospital. The BMC-owned hospital is now partly funded by Reliance Energy and two-third of the beds are charged at the private rate.

Times News Network. Hospital refuses to hand over body, incurs mob wrath. The Times of India, March 27, 2006


Yet another municipal hospital goes private

A plot meant for a civic cancer hospital at Marol, Mumbai, is being handed over to a private party for a 1,000-bed multi-speciality hospital. The hospital was meant to meet the increasing burden of cancer cases in the city. The municipality defended the decision saying that 200 beds in the new hospital are to be reserved for municipal patients. Calling it a betrayal of the people, Congress corporator Amin Patel described the 200-bed reservation as a "mere announcement".

Naresh Kamath. Pvt hospital replaces civic cancer project. The Hindustan Times, March 27, 2006.


Farmers driven to sell their kidneys

The National Human Rights Commission has asked the Maharashtra government to look into reports that poor farmers in the state have been driven to sell their kidneys to raise funds and pay off their mounting debts.

Ramu Bhagwat. NHRC probe into farmers' kidney sale. The Times of India, January 30, 2006.


Amputation "as per medical guidelines"

It was not enough that the police fired on tribals protesting the setting up of a steel plant in Orissa. The bodies that were given for post-mortem were reportedly sent back defaced – the palms were amputated, apparently for identification purposes. The chief district medical officer of Jajpur Brundaban Biswal told reporters that this was done according to medical guidelines as the police could not confirm their identities. Their palms were amputated after the bodies were photographed and thumb impressions taken. Following the news report of this amputation, the chief minister suspended three doctors and also ordered a probe into the incident. The Orissa Medical Service Association protested the action. "The government should not take action against the doctors on the basis of baseless allegations. The bodies were intact when they were handed over to the police," said OMSA president Madhusudan Mishra.

Himanshu S Sahoo. Hindustan Times, January 6, 2006. Sandeep Mishra. Orissa docs threaten to stop autopsy. The Times of India, January 16, 2006


Teaching or target chasin

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