Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Quacks abound all over UP, number doubles in 9 years

- Rajesh Kumar Singh rajesh.singh@hindustant­imes.com

ALARMING The number of unqualifie­d and unregister­ed medical practition­ers increases from 32,245 in 2006 to 75,656 in 2015

LUCKNOW: Quacks are flourishin­g not just in Unnao, the Uttar Pradesh town 60 km from Lucknow that has been in the news, but across the state despite an Allahabad HC order of 2012 prohibitin­g unqualifie­d and unregister­ed medical practition­ers from practising modern medicine.

The number of unqualifie­d and unregister­ed medical practition­ers increased from 32,245 in 2006 to 75,656 in 2015, according to data from the state’s health department. The number is likely to have increased even more since. The health department no longer maintains data on unlicenced or self-styled doctors, but an officer at the department who spoke on condition of anonymity estimates that their number is around 80,000. Some, he adds, actually run unlicenced clinics.

Quacks, especially those in UP are on the radar again because of claims that one of them is responsibl­e for infecting over 50 people with HIV (by treating them for assorted ailments and using the same syringe), although there are enough gaps in this story to question the claim. Not that UP is the only state with a quack problem.

Only 42.7% of self-styled allopathic doctors in India had a medical qualificat­ion, with 57.3% practising without medical training, according to the 2016 report on The Health Workforce in India by the World Health Organisati­on that used data from the 2011 Census of India.

There are 7,000 vacancies in the 18,382 sanctioned posts for government doctors in UP.“THE unavailabi­lity of registered medical practition­ers in the rural areas forces people to take the services of quacks,” said Sanjay Singh, a social activist.

In UP, there have been several efforts to address the problem.

In 2010, the Supreme Court directed the state government to launch a drive against unqualifie­d and unregister­ed medical practition­ers. And in 2012, the Allahabad high court directed the chief secretary, as well as the principal secretary, health and family welfare, to take action against quacks. But nothing much happened for several years. There are several reasons why Chief Medical Officers (CMOS) of districts hesitate to act against quacks.

According to Dr AK Singh, a retired Provincial Medical Services officer, one is the need for them to appear in court for the court hearing for every complaint. “According to the rules, a First Informatio­n Report against an unlicensed or self-styled doctor is lodged in the name of the officer posted as CMO. Whenever the case is taken up for hearing, the officer has to appear in court even if he is posted to another district or promoted to a higher post,” said Singh.

There’s also the fact that such quacks usually function as informal business developmen­t executives for private clinics in large cities. “The quacks are virtually working as deliveryme­n, carrying patients from remote areas to private clinics in cities. Along with the money, they get protection from the local officials,” Singh claimed.

In UP, CMOS also have another problem. In recent years, the health department’s decision to involve quacks and healers in the fight against Japanese Encepha-

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India