NEW DELHI (AP) — At least
11 Indian women are dead and 20 others seriously ill Wednesday after undergoing
free sterilization operations, highlighting the risks women face in
reproductive health in a country struggling with high population growth and
widespread poverty.
A total of 83 women, all
villagers under the age of 32, had the operations Saturday as part of the free
sterilization campaign and were sent home that evening. But dozens later became
ill and were rushed in ambulances to private hospitals in Bilaspur, a city in
central Chhattisgarh state.
By Wednesday morning, at
least 11 women had died, District Magistrate Siddharth Komal Pardeshi told
Press Trust of India.The apparent cause of death was either blood poisoning or
hemorrhagic shock, which occurs when a person has lost too much blood, state
deputy health director Amar Singh said, though the preliminary results from
autopsies were expected to be released Wednesday.
About 20 others were in
critical care, and the central government was rushing a team of doctors to
Bilaspur to help with their treatment."Their condition is very serious.
Blood pressure is low," said Dr. Ramesh Murty at CIMS hospital, one of the
facilities where the sick women were taken. "We are now concentrating on
treating them, not on what caused this."
India's government — long
concerned about pervasive poverty among its rapidly growing 1.3 billion
population— performs millions of free sterilizations to both women and men who
want to avoid the risk and cost of having a baby. The vast majority of
patients, however, are poor women — paid a one-time incentive fee to undergo
the surgery of about $10-$20, or the equivalent of about a week's pay for a
poor person in India. About 180 million people in the country still live on
less than $1.25 a day.
India has one of the
world's highest rates of sterilization among women, with about 37 percent
undergoing such operations compared with 29 percent in China, according to 2006
statistics reported by the United Nations. During 2011-12, the government said
4.6 million Indian women were sterilized.
Activists blame the
incentive payments, as well as sterilization quotas set by the government, for
leading health authorities to pressure patients into surgery rather than
advising them on other forms of contraception.
"These women have
become victims because of the target-based approach to population
control," said Brinda Karat of the All India Democratic Women's
Association, who has demanded that the state's health minister resign.
India has one of the
world's worst records on maternal health care, with 200 women dying during
pregnancy or childbirth for every 100,000 patients, compared with China's 37
deaths for every 100,000 women who give birth. Its infant mortality rate — 63
of every 1,000 newborns die — also makes it one of the worst places on Earth to
be born. By comparison, China records about 15 infant deaths for every 1,000
births.
The women who underwent
surgery on Saturday were each paid about $10, and all 83 surgeries were
performed within six hours, the state's chief medical officer, Dr. S.K. Mandal,
told the Associated Press by telephone."That is not usual," he said,
but declined to comment further until the autopsies had determined exactly what
went wrong.
The state suspended four
government doctors, including the surgeon who oversaw the operations and the
district's chief medical officer."It appears the incident occurred due to
negligence" by doctors, Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Raman Singh said,
before urging patience for the autopsy results. He also said the victims'
families would each receive a compensation payment of about $6,600.
Prime Minister Narendra
Modi said in Myanmar, where he was on an official visit, that he had spoken
with Singh and urged a thorough investigation.
Meanwhile, the state's surgeons held an emergency meeting
Tuesday night to discuss whether to continue with the state's sterilization
schedule, with a target of 180,000 for the year ending in March set by the
central government, Mandal said. They also were discussing surgery practices
and guidelines, he said.
The World Health
Organization advises that a patient be monitored for 48 hours after undergoing
laparoscopic, or "keyhole," sterilization surgeries like those
conducted in Bilaspur. The procedure is one of the most commonly performed,
minimally invasive surgeries, and is usually done under local anasthetic.
A spokeswoman for the
federal Health Ministry declined to confirm whether the central government was
setting sterilization quotas. India's central government had said it stopped
setting targets for sterilizing women in the 1990s.
India was one of the first countries to introduce family
planning as a government program in the 1960s, when the country's population
was less than half what it is today at about 450 million.
But outrage erupted in the 1970s after Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi imposed a policy of forcibly sterilizing men who had
already fathered two children. Opponents at the time said the program also
targeted unmarried and poor men, with doctors given bonuses for operating on
low-income patients. Since then, vasectomies have been relatively unpopular in
India, with only about 1 percent of men opting for the procedure.
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