The Guardian (Charlottetown)

New special taskforces formed to tackle ‘missing wombs’ scandal in rural India

- ROLI SRIVASTAVA

MUMBAI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Special taskforces have been establishe­d in India to help stop women from being duped by doctors into having unnecessar­y hysterecto­mies that cause debt bondage and enslave families, the country’s health ministry said.

A Thomson Reuters Foundation investigat­ion in three Indian states, published in May, found that families were taking big loans for the unnecessar­y removal of the uterus and ovaries of women, forcing many into debt or slavery.

India’s health ministry held a day-long consultati­on with human rights campaigner­s, gynaecolog­ists, medical experts and state officials this week, hoping to find the best ways to solve the health scandal.

Six taskforces have now been formed to develop a strategy within 15 days for keeping a nationwide record of hysterecto­my cases and creating better awareness in villages about unnecessar­y surgeries.

The taskforces, comprising health campaigner­s, government officials and representa­tives from communitie­s, will also develop a list of alternativ­e treatments for many of the health complaints suffered by Indian women who visit doctors.

“Our main takeaway was that almost 95% of hysterecto­mies performed in India are unnecessar­y,” Dinesh Baswal, deputy commission­er of maternal health at the health ministry told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone on Thursday.

“Most women undergoing the surgery are uneducated and from rural India. We hope that the solutions that emerge from here on will protect the poor from this cost,” Baswal said.

About 3% of Indian women have had hysterecto­mies, according to a government survey in 2018, which showed that half of the women had never gone to school and two-thirds of surgeries were performed in private hospitals.

Hysterecto­mies are never the solution to most of the health problems Indian women present to doctors, such as irregular periods, white discharge or pelvic pain, medical experts say.

Rising demand for the surgeries highlighte­d the issue of private doctors cashing in on ignorance, they add.

But the high cost of hysterecto­mies driving families into slavery had largely gone unnoticed, human rights activists said.

India is home to an estimated 8 million modern-day slaves, working at farms, factories and fisheries, trapped in the sex trade or forced into marriages, according to the Global Slavery Index by the Australia-based charity Walk Free Foundation.

Human rights campaigner­s quoted in the Thomson Reuters Foundation investigat­ion were invited to the government­backed consultati­on this week to share their data on women who had undergone the surgery in their respective regions.

“This (the consultati­on) is a beginning,” said Bharath Bhushan, founder of Centre for Action Research and People’s Developmen­t (CARPED) - one of the first organisati­ons to study the medical malpractic­e in 2005.

“The government is acting now but hysterecto­mies cannot be viewed simply as a medical problem,” Bhushan said. “This is the outcome of years of medical malpractic­e that has forced many into bondage.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A group of people sit on a sea-wall watching the sunset over the Arabian Sea in Bombay in this March 3, 2001. photo.
REUTERS A group of people sit on a sea-wall watching the sunset over the Arabian Sea in Bombay in this March 3, 2001. photo.

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