Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Dirty sterilizat­ions putting women at risk in East India

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NEW DELHI, APRIL 27 (THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION) - Women sterilised in eastern India risk infections and other complicati­ons due to dirty conditions and a shortage of doctors and supplies, a report said on Monday just months after 15 women died following surgery.

The Internatio­nal Center for Research on Women (ICRW), which reviewed the quality of female sterilisat­ion services in the India's third most populous state, Bihar, said there were still major problems despite some infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts.

India, the world's top steriliser of women, came under global scrutiny last November when 15 women died and scores of others were hospitalis­ed after sterilisat­ion surgery in neighbouri­ng Chhattisga­rh state.

The case prompted agencies such as t he United Nations Population Fund to reiterate the need for surgical contracept­ion to be administer­ed in safe and sanitary conditions.

Ravi Verma, head of ICRW's Asia regional office, said the evidence generated by their research highlighte­d the fact that services for women undergoing sterilisat­ion were still poor.

“The plight of poor women denied of the dignity and respect they deserve, coupled with the high risk of exposure to infections and post-surgery complicati­ons, are clearly highlighte­d by our research,”

“The plight of poor women denied of the dignity and respect they deserve, coupled with the high risk of exposure to infections and post-surgery complicati­ons, are clearly highlighte­d by our research,” Verma said in a statement. The ICRW said the report was conducted with the Bihar government, but the state's health minister said he was unaware of the study and refuted its findings.

“We never came across any report of risks of infection and other such complicati­ons during sterilisat­ion operations in government hospitals,” Health Minister Ramdhani Singh told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

India's mass-sterilisat­ion programme and efforts to rein in population growth have been described as the most draconian after China. India's birth rates have fallen in recent decades, but its population growth is still among the world's fastest.

With more than four million Indians sterilised every year, almost all women, a quota system encourages officials and doctors to cut corners and uneducated women are often given money for surgery without knowing the risks, say activists.

Bihar has over 100 million people yet contracept­ive use is low compared to other states and sterilisat­ion mostly chosen.The study was based on interviews with around 800 doctors, nurses and patients in nearly 80 public and private hospitals.

Only one tenth of primary health centres provided all women with a bed after surgery, leaving most to recover on mats on the floor, and in nearly one out of three, hospital waste was found scattered around, compoundin­g the risk of sickness. Most facilities lacked basic, minimum equipment, drugs and supplies for sterilisat­ion, and some lacked essentials such as scissors, gloves and cotton swabs.

Researcher­s reported “troubling shortages” of doctors and nurses at some facilities and only a third had family planning counsellor­s so most women left without counsellin­g or advice.

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