Health Data of Dumka and Birbhum from the Pratichi Report (Pratichi is the 
foundation Amartya Sen put up with his Nobel Prize money)





If the non-availability of medical treatment from the public health delivery 
system imposes a heavy economic burden on the suffering people and their 
families (as they have to depend upon the market to buy medical assistance), 
unethical and corrupt medical practices by different medical practitioners make 
things worse, As we have seen earlier in this section, the unqualified medical 
practitioners (quacks) who form the backbone of the health services, 
particularly in Dumka, operate without sufficient medical education. In almost 
all the study villages (and also in some other villages) the quacks were seen 
to c rry saline water bottles with them, which are used as the most common 
medicine for any sort of disease. The first thing they were seen to do was to 
administer saline water even before doing a physical check-up, let alone trying 
other modes of treatment. According to a Block PHC incharge in Dumka, "These 
illiterates without knowing the consequences of administering saline kill many 
patients. There is very little scope for using saline water in cases of 
malaria; rather, it generally proves counterproductive if administered during 
fever. The only motive behind such ill-practices is to squeeze as much money as 
possible from the poor ignorant patients."



Some of the quacks were also reported to have sexually abused female patients. 
In a Dumka village we were told: "\with one unmarried woman, the quack said he 
had forgotten to bring his stethoscope and fondled the breasts of the patient 
pretending to do a check-up. Not all villagers were as ignorant as this 
particular 'illiterate patient and some of the young men of the village beat 
him black and blue as punishment..."



Not only the quacks, there is evidence of severe medical abuse even by 
qualified private practitioners. Suna Hembram was suffering from general 
weakness. He visited a highly qualified medical practitioner at Dumka town who 
aside from government service and private medical practice owns a medicine 
shop, a pathological laboratory and a nursing home. After checking up the 
patient he prescribed three medicines (all in tablet and capsule form) and 
advised malaria Parasite test. Flis assistant (called a compounder) took him to 
the nursing home, administered a saline and then took him to the laboratory for 
a Malaria Parasite test and also for an X-ray! No paper or bill or receipt was 
given. When Hembram asked for the accounts, he was given a piece of scrap 
packaging paper from a medicine bottle charging Rs 900.



Hembram had only Rs 500 with him. His wife borrowed the rest from relative 
living at Karharbil on the outskirts of Dumka town and got her husband released.



Hembram, however, did not come round. After 15 days he saw a physician at

Deoghar, who is known to be sympathetic towards poor patients, who diagnosed 
that Hembram had low blood pressure! This time he had to spend only Rs 75, 
which included his bus fare.



While private practitioners are accused of medical abuse which they indulge in 
only to earn money, in the most unethical ways, government doctors were also 
frequently held responsible for negligence in treatrnent. A patient with a 
fractured leg was treated at the Dumka Sadar Hospital. He had to spend Rs. 800 
for the treatment. But after the plaster was removed, his leg was found to have 
become deformed. The fractured bone had not joined properly. The government 
doctor told him that it was irreparable. Later, the patient visited ^ private 
doctor in Patna. He had to go through a surgical operation to repair the 
damaged leg, which claimed a sum of Rs. 15,000.



Cases of medical abuse in Birbhum too ranged from quacks to qualified medical 
practitioners, though to a lesser extent compared to Dumka'



Many of the quacks of Birbhum were seen to remove the foils of the medicines 
before gt ri"g them to the patients. Some people in the study area and some 
qualified doctors maintained that such practices Oy th. quacks) was to 
safeguard themselves from future legal complications (death caused by wrong 
medication etc.). Some of the quacks were also reported to have been using 
"magic treatment" or religious rituals (puja, manot, etc). One such quack told 
us that no foreign practices could be successful in India unless it was backed 
by Indian religious futh. "Viswase rnila1 uasta' tarke bahudar- it is faith 
that yields fruit, not reasoning". One quack started his allopathic practice 
when he was only a student of Class 8. He has a reported area of 10- 12 
villages where he travels regularly. According to him his popularity had 
increased because of the "unique" practice of mixing allopathic medicine with 
religious rituals.



Another quack said that he uses a long range of antibiotics,"konl ekta to 
lagbei! (One of these will surely work!)" This he did, as he had to save the 
patient's life.



Many of the people who seek services from the public or private qualified 
practitioners also reportedly fall prey to medical abuses. After consulting 
with a government doctor in his private chamber a pregnant woman was admitted 
to a sub-divisional hospital of Birbhum for childbirth. At the time of delivery 
neither a doctor nor a nurse assisted her. She was released after three days 
(and during her stay in the hospital she remained almost unattended). In the 
evening of the day of release from the hospital she started shivering and was 
taken back to the private clinic of the said doctor, where she was told that 
there were traces of placenta in the uterus.



Dr Prabir Chatterjee

Jharkhandi.com/prabirchatterjee










Reply via email to