The Indian Express (5 February 1994) featured a story on proposed surgery on mentally handicapped women that weekend at the Sassoon General Hospital in Poona . Dr. Shirish Sheth, consultant obstetrician and gynecologist in Bombay was to remove the uterus from each of several such women.
The rationale for these operations was two-fold:
These operations infuriated several groups working on behalf of women. Claiming that keeping these women clean during the three or four days when they were menstruating each month was not an unsurmountable problem, they felt that removal of the womb would further encourage antisocial elements and worsen the probability of rape. They asked for a ban on such operations and pleaded for better care of such women instead. Chief Minister Sharad Pawar ordered an immediate stoppage of these operations.
The issue focusses attention on the following ethical considerations:
Families with mentally handicapped girls deserve compassion. Provided ethical guidelines are followed, society will sanction every possible help. The present furore follows an absence of such guidelines. It is high time that the medical profession sets its own house in order and formulates ethical principles governing conduct in this and other similar matters. If this is not done we shall continue to see interference by powerful politicians in matters medical as was seen here. The outbreak of fury at these operations is, in part, against the perception by the state of these women as ‘disposables’. Whilst the situation may not be as bad as that in Bogota or Cali in Colombia, it is a step in that direction.
(We are seeking the views of Dr. Shirish Sheth, the federation of obstetricians and legal experts on this issue. Editor)