World Doctor’s day, Violence against doctors
Doctors Day is celebrated
to recognise the contribution of doctors to individual life and communities.
The date may vary from nation to nation. In our country it is celebrated on
July 1 which is birth and Death Anniversary of the most famous physician of India
Dr BC Roy.
The annual celebration is to
spread awareness about the contribution of doctors to the society. Although
Doctors Day is supposed to be celebrated by patients to thank them but in
reality it is usually celebrated by doctors themselves in India.
The medical profession is one of the riskier professions.
Knowingly doctors are taking risks of getting infected with dreaded infection
like TB, AIDS, Hepatitis etc from patients and getting post radiation cancer
from radiation exposure in performing their duties.
But taking that much risk and working in odd conditions and
hours, they are being rewarded with verbal and physical violence. Verbal
aggression or violence is so common that none of the doctors can claim that he
has not encountered verbal abuse from the patient’s side for no fault.
“No physician, however conscientious or careful, can tell what
day or hour he may not be the object of some undeserved attack, malicious
accusation, blackmail or suit for damage.”
This paragraph from a reputed journal from the USA, written 135
years ago shows that violence against doctors is not new, and that it has been
reported from all over the world, but the trend of violence against medical
doctors is rising rapidly in our country, which is alarming. In 1996 the 49th
World Health Assembly declared violence a major and growing global health
problem.
Several such incidents have been reported from India in the past
however, this menace has not been highlighted adequately earlier.
The recent violent act done in Kolkata has elicited the
attention of mass media and also of the political system.Being an orthopaedic
surgeon with an experience of 40 years and dealing with simple to life
threatening accidents, I have yet to see the patient, friends and family of
road traffic accidents victim who own the responsibility of an accident.
On the contrary, they blame others for the cause of accidents
and blame doctors for any complication if it occurs during treatment even
knowing very well that the complication occurred due to his or her own mistake.
I would like to cite the example of one my patients who was
being treated for old infected non-union of thigh bone fracture.
Infection got controlled, fracture was healing and patient was
walking for past four months with a plaster. However, he sustained a fracture
again and blaming me, started to threaten me with dire consequences. The matter
was brought to the notice of police.
Most of these problems are very small in the beginning but they
take alarming shape and the outcome of the conflict becomes horrendous. Most of
the times, the conflict is not because of the medical negligence.
But if conflict is analysed minutely then the reason turns out
to be mainly non medical problem and rarely medical.
If you analyse the incidence of the violence against the
doctors, the cause is often monetary-- either one doesn’t want to pay the
pending hospital bills during treatment or anticipate the hefty monetary
compensation after the treatment.
Those who are well to do or well educated prefer the monetary
compensation and will take legal course. However, with it comes to those who
are not well to do or well versed with the medical or legal knowledge, then
incident escalates to verbal and/or physical violence against the doctors.
The patient trusts and
places his life in the hands of doctor. On many occasions, the patient
discloses confidential information to the doctor which he/she might or might
not have discussed with his/her spouse or family member. In no other profession
does the individual place so much trust and faith. In some regions,
particularly in rural India, the doctor is equated with God. The doctor is,
therefore, duty-bound to have a higher level of moral code of conduct than
those in other professions and must understand that he/she is in a very
privileged position.
Doctors in India over the years have shown remarkable improvements and made definite progress in medical treatments that really need to be acknowledged. Let us honor their work to help mankind thrive by being healthy and disease free.
Doctors in India over the years have shown remarkable improvements and made definite progress in medical treatments that really need to be acknowledged. Let us honor their work to help mankind thrive by being healthy and disease free.
The other causes of medical violence are the social and psycho-social problems. In the majority of the cases (60-70%), such violence takes the form of either verbal abuse or aggressive gestures and rest of them turn out to be physical violence. It seems that these incidents are either reactive or hostile. As long as they are reactive, it can be understood easily. Like the death of a younger person having no known medical problem or a medical
problem not known to the friends and family.
A study conducted by the Indian Medical Association found that 75 per cent of the surveyed doctors had suffered some form of physical violence while on duty. Most of these assaults were by relatives of very ill patients admitted in ICU and emergency.
As Doctors Day was started to celebrate the achievements of the doctors by the patients their family and friends, in the current scenario how can one expect such patients to celebrate the occasion? Many cases of abuse or violence against the doctors are being ignored and rarely reported by most of the doctors especially in busy hospitals or in the reputed hospitals thinking and understanding very well that this will ultimately harm the reputation of the doctor and/or the hospital.
I personally feel that the situation is pathetic and this kind of the street justice is commonly seen in the medical practice now. If the situation is not controlled, it will be a serious threat to medical profession. No one can say for sure that he will not need medical help from womb to tomb.
The union health minister Dr Harsh Vardan has taken quick action
to make a bill for the violence against the doctors a non-bailable offence with
minimum 12 year jail.
Once it is passed and implemented, it will be a milestone for
controlling this menace. The working of all professions is based on the
principle of trust and faith among the service giver and the client. But it is
most important in the doctor-patient relation, if we don’t have bond of trust
and faith between doctor and patient then how can doctors work? Unfortunately
the doctors are always under the scanner of suspicion by patients and their
relatives.
Modern medicine is neither cheap nor 100 per cent
effective in curing the disease in all cases. Doctors are most of the time
working in conditions of many uncertainties because human body is working on
dynamic principles not like the other sectors.
The doctor has to deal with the
medical and non medical problem. Hence doctor should have good behaviour,
knowledge and skill to deal with different kinds of problems.
But unfortunately doctors are also human like patient and their
relatives and it should always be kept in mind. As there are certain
responsibilities of doctors and other healthcare workers, similarly,
responsibilities also have to be borne by patients and their relatives.
No comments:
Post a Comment