Murder at health camp, say blinded patients
October 17th, 2011 - 3:46 pm ICT by IANSRaipur, Oct 17 (IANS) “It is like someone called me for sweets and then engineered a cold-blooded murder,” 47-year-old Lalmati said at Chhattisgarh’s largest government hospital here.
She was referring to a botched cataract surgery at a government health camp recently that has left her blind in one eye.
A resident of Durg district’s Dalli-Rajhara area, Lalmati was among the 325 people persuaded by local authorities to attend the camp at Balod, 120 km from capital Raipur, and make it a highly successful. The weeklong event concluded Sep 30.
“I lost sight in my left eye minutes after the surgery,” 59-year-old Bhaiyalal Dheemar from Shikaripara in Balod said.
“I told doctors to be careful because I have to take care of my wife, who is ailing for five years, and my son and daughter-in-law do not live with me, but they kept telling me not to worry,” he said.
“Why have the blinded me? I need a reply,” he demanded in anger.
So far 45 persons, mostly the elderly one the poor, have lost sight after being operated on by government doctors. Six men and five women were admitted in Raipur while others were taken to government hospitals in Durg and other places.
“I had cataract in both my eyes. One eye was operated upon and I was told the second would be operated a few months later. After the operation, there was swelling within hours and pus a day later,” Lalmati said.
“I lost my eyesight completely,” she rued. “The doctors who are caring for me in Raipur say there is no chance of regaining sight as there were blunders at the health camp.”
She is among the 11 persons shifted Oct 13 to Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar Government Medical College and Hospital here — after families of patients and locals protested for a week seeking immediate medical attention for the affected.
“My wife has poor vision for about two years and I had no money to get her operated upon at a private hospital due to high medical costs,” Lalmati’s husband Gorakhnath said.
“I was really thrilled to hear that the government would be holding a weeklong camp Sep 20, but the operation turned my family life to hell overnight: she lost sight from one of the better eyes,” Gorakhnath said.
“I tell people: never go to government health camps because doctors behave like killers; they don’t respect human values and feelings,” he said as he sat by his wife’s bedside.
“I don’t know how I will lead my life because my wife was earning some money selling vegetables,” he said. “I relied on her earnings because I have already several health problems.”
Dr. Ashok Chandrakar, head of the eye department at the Ambedkar hospital, is most sympathetic.
“Very difficult to restore their eyesight,” he said. “Those doctors made basic mistakes and there is hardly any chance to help other than offering them sympathetic words. Had they been brought earlier, perhaps. Not after two weeks.”
Top officials here at Directorate of Health Services admit “mistakes by doctors at all levels at the Balod camp” but but refusing say anyone will have to pay the price after the probe report.
Sources say that the state government has received a report from Durg district collector Reena Babasaheb Kangale, in which she has held all the doctors — P. Joshi, C.M. More, A.K. Mishra and others — guilty of gross negligence and recommended tough action.
(Sujeet Kumar can be contacted at sujeet.k@ians.in)
- 45 blinded: Congress seeks Rs.2 mn for each victim - Oct 18, 2011
- 13 more blinded after cataract surgery - Oct 16, 2011
- Eleven lose sight after surgery at government camp - Oct 13, 2011
- 45 blinded: Congress slams BJP for compensation - Oct 25, 2011
- Chhattisgarh gets notice for botched eye operations - Jan 24, 2012
- Congress wants minister sacked over botched eye camp - Dec 01, 2011
- Chhattisgarh denies three dead after operation - Oct 20, 2011
- Nine go blind after operation in Andhra - May 27, 2012
- 100 blinded after Chhattisgarh eye operations: Jogi - Jan 06, 2012
- Chhattisgarh admits 44 blinded at Durg eye camp - Dec 23, 2011
- Andhra Government vows to take action in eye camp blinding incident - Oct 26, 2009
- Five people lose sight after surgery in Andhra - Dec 15, 2011
- 22 complain of blurred vision after surgery in free camp - Feb 09, 2009
- BJP retains Chhattisgarh assembly seat, Congress admits setback (Lead) - Feb 17, 2011
- Nine persons lose vision after cataract surgery in Tamil Nadu - Dec 16, 2009
Tags: bhimrao ambedkar, cataract surgery, chhattisgarh, cold blooded murder, dalli rajhara, durg, five women, gorakhnath, government doctors, government hospital, government hospitals, government medical college, health camp, local authorities, medical costs, poor vision, private hospital, six men, son and daughter, weeklong event