Gulf Today

Mamata assures new security measures to striking doctors

West Bengal CM also accepted the demand to control access to emergency wards of hospitals and installing panic buttons for doctors that could be used to alert the local police station about a potential threat

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Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday accepted an unusual demand to live stream her meeting with representa­tives from Bengal’s medical colleges ater the striking junior doctors made this a pre-condition to meet the chief minister at the state secretaria­t.

The meeting was to take place at 3 pm but started a litle late due to the back-and-forth over the live telecast pre-condition. The agitation over a doctor’s assault in Kolkata has spread beyond Bengal to nearly 17 states.

At the meeting, Mamata accepted several suggestion­s made by the young doctors including a grievance cell in all government hospitals where patients, who were not satisfied with the doctors, could complain. Banerjee also underlined that it wasn’t that her government had less than a zero tolerance policy towards atacks on doctors.

“No government wants to have an incident like that. Things like this happens spontaneou­sly, just like police vehicles are burnt. We don’t want that and we don’t want you to get hurt,” she told the doctors during the interactio­n.

She also accepted the demand to control access to emergency wards of hospitals and installing panic butons for doctors that could be used to alert the local police station about a potential threat.

Banerjee, who asked Kolkata’s top police officer to respond to criticism that policemen at Nrshospita­l did not come to the rescue of the doctor who was beaten by a patient’s relatives, also ordered that the police would appoint nodal officers for hospitals for security of doctors.

The meeting was held ater protests, which began on Monday last ater at least three junior doctors were beaten up by family members of a patient who died in the state-run NRS Medical College, has paralysed operations of outpatient department­s (OPDS) and spilled over to other parts of the country, including the national capital of New Delhi.

At their meeting, the doctors are expected to seek beter infrastruc­ture at state-run hospitals, beter security and the arrest of the atackers at Nrshospita­l during the meeting.

Mamata Banerjee had last week admonished the young doctors when she first turned up at a protest by doctors at the hospital and threatened to have them evicted from their hostels if they did not call off their agitation and get back to treating patients. Mamata Banerjee’s outburst, widely seen as a self-goal, was blamed for the agitators hardening their stance and united government doctors across the country.

Thousands of doctors skipped work on Monday protesting against unsafe conditions at work ater three of their colleagues were assaulted in West Bengal last week, paralysing health facilities across the country. The strike was called by the Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA).

Doctors of state-run medical colleges and hospitals in West Bengal are already protesting since last week.

Health care services continue to remain affected in the emergency wards, outdoor facilities and pathologic­al units of many state-run hospitals and private medical facilities in West Bengal on Monday, the seventh day of the strike.

The top medical body said all non-essential services, including outdoor patient department (OPD) services, will be withdrawn for 24 hours from 6 am on Monday to 6 am on Tuesday. Emergency and casualty services will continue to function, it said.

Doctors at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New Delhi took out a protest march on Monday and are on strike from Monday noon till 6 am on Tuesday. Emergency services including casualty, ICU and labour room will function as usual.

“We once again urge the West Bengal administra­tion to fulfil the demands of the striking doctors and resolve the mater amicably at the earliest in the best interest of the general public,” the AIIMS Resident Doctors Associatio­n (RDA) said in a statement.

It said a meeting of its general body will be held at 6 pm to decide the further course of action.

Doctors in several other states like Gujarat, Rajasthan and Tripura are also striking.

IMA had launched a four-day nationwide protest from Friday and wrote to union home minister Amit Shah demanding a central law to check violence against healthcare workers.

Its announceme­nt for a strike on Sunday came a day ater Union health minister Harsh Vardhan asked states to consider en acting specific legislatio­n for protecting doctors and medical profession­als from any form of violence.

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 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑ A doctor checks a patient as she wears a helmet to ask for protection and to protest against violence during the nationwide doctors strike in Chennai on Monday.
Agence France-presse ↑ A doctor checks a patient as she wears a helmet to ask for protection and to protest against violence during the nationwide doctors strike in Chennai on Monday.

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