Indian Journal of Medical Ethics

CORRESPONDENCE


Doctors and targets

The control of blindness has been accorded priority by the Government of India. As the chief cause of preventable blindness in India is cataract, its surgical removal has been emphasised. Whilst this goal is laudable, as with so many other areas in health care, the methods used are such that they subvert the basic aim.

Every district has been allotted a target number of operations for cataracts that must be performed in a given time. In some parts of Tamil Nadu, in order to achieve these targets, methods abandoned universally on account of the high risk of complications from them have been pressed into use. As a consequence, to use the words of an ophthalmic surgeon, ‘cataract blindness is being converted to aphakic blindness.’

The example of doctors subverting the fundamental medical dictum – prinum non nocere – is not peculiar to ophthalmologists. It was dramatically exposed in the infamous sterilisation programme of Sanjay Gandhi. The performance of hysterectomy in the mentally handicapped in Maharashtra is also fresh in our memories.

These incidents are not isolated occurences. They are symptomatic of the way in which the medical profesion allows itself to be subverted by the state (the most powerful sections of society) against the powerless. It is not uncommon to hear doctors referring to the poor patients who attend such ‘camps’ as ‘cattle’ and ‘useless to society’. Such statements reveal in the doctors an attitude of superiority and a feeling that they can judge the value of other human beings.

It is this attitude, this vision of the world, if you will, that directs their behaviour. It is a reflection of the attitudes of the social strata from which they hail – the middle and upper classes – uninfluenced by education or contemplation.

At meetings to review such programmes as that for removal of cataracts, invariably headed by the Collector or some other non-medical person, one never hears a whimper of protest from the doctors when these functionaries demand realisation of targets irrespective of the means for doing so. Although there are other reasons for such servility such as the fear of transfer, one cannot escape getting the feeling that doctors primarily acquiesce as they themselves feel that anything goes when dealing with the poor and the illiterate. All considerations of ethics and responsibility to patients are lost as they are viewed as less than human. Such programmes, more often than not, end up as target practice with the poor as victims.

It is high time that the medical profession in particular and society at large effected a fundamental change in the way the authorities and doctors treat poor citizens.

Thomas George, G9 Railway Colony, Ponmalai, Tiruchi, 620 004.

(See item 3 under Vox Populi in this issue for a relevant report. Editor)