Laparoscopic sterilisation has been made available in India since the 1970s. This procedure requires high skill on the part of the surgeon and can be performed as an outpatient procedure. In the absence of reliable spacing methods, it is believed that women find this method convenient as it takes little time and also leaves a very small physical scar. Since the early 1980s, this method of female sterilisation has become the mainstay of India’s family planning programme. It is provided in camps as well as in health centres.
Keeping in view the need to maintain aseptic procedures and safeguard patients from hepatitis and HIV infection, the government issued guidelines relating to the cleaning and use of laparoscopes. According to the guidelines, laparoscopes are to be washed and dried after each operation and immersed in Cidex solution for at least 30 minutes. This implies that a surgeon using two laparoscopes can perform a maximum of 25 operations in one working day of eight hours. (source: letter from ministry of health and family welfare dated September 23, 1993, quoted in Ramanathan et al in Reproductive Health Matters November 1995).
In the post-Cairo period, under the new RCH approach, the government issued guidelines with regard to client screening – taking medical history, basic physical examination and laboratory examination for haemoglobin, blood sugar and albumin. Patients are also expected to be given clear pre-and post-operative instructions. The operation is to be followed by strict monitoring for three hours followed by three visits by the ANM at stipulated intervals.
In the last three years, researchers have observed sterilisation camps in many states. Some common observations made by them:
The most worrisome aspect is the attitude of service providers. They treat the clients with little regard for human dignity. Unfortunately, even women doctors do not treat their clients differently.
While there may be some variations across states, the above description is quite representative of what happens in sterilisation camps. During discussions with administrators and technical people in the government, most agreed that the situation in the camps was far from desirable, admitting that it was a dehumanizing experience – not only for the clients but even for sensitive service providers. The following reasons were cited by administrators in many states as factors responsible for this situation
It is more than apparent that there is a huge gap between policy-level intentions and government of India guidelines and the ground reality. While officers in the government of India acknowledge the need to improve quality of care, operationalising it is bound to be an uphill task.
In-service training manual of PHC medical officers, FP Quality of care, Department of Family Welfare, Government of Himachal Pradesh, 1995. Personal communication with the director, medicine and health, government of Rajasthan, Jaipur.
Draft project document prepared for the proposed SIDA-assisted RCH initiative in seven districts of Rajasthan, Indian Institute of Health Management Research, Jaipur, March 1998.
Mavlakar Dilip: Quality of family planning in India: a review of public and private sector. Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, January 1996.
A bill introduced in the Delhi State Assembly seeks to deny ration cards to families exceeding the two-child norm. It also demands that families which exceed the norm be punished by denial of bank loans, enrollment in government housing schemes and cooperative societies and the parents lose the right to contest civic body elections.
“The bill is wholly misconceived, unconstitutional and discriminatory and also objectionably elitist in its assertions,” said Suhasini Ali, former member of Parliament and activist with the All India Democratic Women’s Association. The bill flies in the face of commitments by India to agreements at the International Conference on Population and Development at Cairo in 1994 and the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing the next year. Since then, on paper, the country’s family welfare programmes have increased funding for reproductive health and tried to expand the range of services while trying to limit population size.
But according to the Voluntary Health Association of India (VHAI), the new policy directives have failed to reach the grassroots level. Says VHAI’s Mira Shiva, “the government must get out of the sterilisation trap of which the Department of Family Welfare is itself the main victim.”
According to Shiva, doing away with the department would be a good beginning. According to Shiva, the infant mortality rate in India at 74 per thousand is still too high to expect people to take the two-child norm seriously. “There is no question of a poor woman agreeing to have only two children when she knows that both of them may die of some disease or the other,” she said. “Basic survival, potable water, proper sanitation and affordable health care have to be the crux of any population policy.”
From: Inter Press Service, July 13, 1999