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Two Disturbing Stories
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best efforts and mechanisms of NACO, state and district AIDS Control Societies
and various NGOs are clearly not being enough to deal with the insensitivity
and discrimination that HIV-positive patients continue to be subjected to in
various Indian hospitals.
It is still not uncommon to hear about Indian hospitals refusing to admit or
treat HIV patients in gross violation of a Supreme Court order stating
that doctors in Government and private hospitals should not refuse treatment
to People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLHA).
In a shocking incident last month in Swaroop Rani Nehru hospital, a state-owned
hospital in Allahabad, the hospital staff not only refused to treat a HIV-positive
patient but in a dastardly act pasted an 'HIV' sign on the wall behind the bed
of the HIV patient (admitted in surgical emergency ward). The hospital had earlier
relented to admit the patient only after the Allahabad Network for People Living
with HIV Positive (ANP Plus) took up the matter with the district magistrate.
Even as the HIV sign was removed after intervention from ANP Plus, the hospital's
apathy and cruelty did not stop. The staff then wrote ART (Anti-retroviral
Therapy) on the wall and tied a red ribbon, indicating NACO and thus HIV patient,
on the drip stand. The doctors also refused to treat the patient, stating proper
medical kits were not available in the hospital. According to NACO and WHO guidelines,
every hospital has to have a basic protective kit for doctors for treating HIV
positive patients. The hospital management had later informed that medical kit
was available.
In the same state, around two years back, two doctors of Lala Lajpat Rai Memorial
Medical College, Meerut, were suspended by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati
because of denying to assist in the delivery of a HIV-positive woman. Instead,
the doctors had asked the patient's husband to deliver the baby. From the Allahabad
hospital, however, there has been no news of any action against the insensitive
staff.
From a case of insensitivity to a case of grave error the damage done
to a patient is no less. In another incident in Mumbai last month, an Integrated
Centre for Testing and Counselling (ICTC) issued a false HIV-positive report
to a pregnant woman. When the couple did the test in a private lab, the test
showed negative result. But the damage was done the lady underwent stress-induced
miscarriage of her seven-week-old foetus.
According to experts, the laboratory should have done the screening test with
two different kits and if the diagnosis was positive with both, then the laboratory
should have suggested reconfirmation with Elisa and Western Blot. The ICTC did
no perform more than a single test for a person from a low risk group. With
90 lab technicians and 120 counsellors across 74 ICTC centers in Mumbai, it
is shameful that such an incident has occurred causing such irreparable
damage.
Though it is commendable that the Mumbai District AIDS Control Society (MDACS)
had acknowledged the mistake, deemed it 'inexcusable' and taken immediate punitive
action by issuing memos and transferring the two employees behind the error,
it is not enough. In a PIL filed last year, it was alleged that NACO has used
sub-standard HIV kits in second national AIDS control programme posing
a potential danger of transmitting HIV to unsuspecting patients through blood
transfusion. So, there is a need to check the quality of the kits.
There is also an urgent need to ramp up awareness campaigns to educate and sensitise
the medical fraternity and hospital staff in dealing with HIV patients. If explaining
does not work, then action stricter than mere suspension of staff needs to be
taken. We also need to ensure that HIV kits are available across all hospitals
and health centres.
Rita Dutta
rita.dutta@expressindia.com
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