www.expressindia.com - Weather | Horoscope | Stocks | RSS
expressindia web city
HomeBlogsCricketAstrology TendersClassifieds Reader Comments Hotels
Sign In / Register | Archive
Expressindia » Story

Medical services hit in Rajasthan following doctors' stir

Font Size

Agencies

Posted: Sep 07, 2010 at 1457 hrs IST

Jaipur The government-run medical and health services in Rajasthan remained crippled as resident doctors continued the third day of their strike today.

Doctors began the strike on Sunday protesting against alleged lathicharge on medicos in Jodhpur and it quickly spread to hospitals in five districts, including in Jaipur and Ajmer, official sources said.

With health services badly hit in the affected areas, hundreds of patients and their relatives were seen running from one ward to another in search of doctors for treating those admitted in hospitals, they said.

Though there have been reports of several deaths in the last three days, officials at the State Medical and Health Directorate maintained the deaths were not connected to the strike.

Meanwhile, Health Minister A A Khan met senior officials and doctors to resolve the deadlock.

In New Delhi, Union Minister of State for Health Dinesh Trivedi described the stir as "very, very sad", while expressing concern over reports that several people had died as a result of the strike.

"Even one person should not die because of this kind of negligence and irresponsible behaviour of the doctors.

Although 'health' is a state subject, I have asked my ministry to immediately look into the matter and get in touch with the state government," he said.

"People like doctors are supposed to save lives and I don't think anything could be as sad if someone loses his life because of the strike," he said.

Trivedi said the stir needs to be resolved through negotiations and dialogue.

He also said if doctors don't behave, there “were provisions of the law” to deal with it. Trivedi said the Medical Council of India should also seriously consider revoking the registrations of doctors who have gone on strike.

Echoing similar sentiments, Khan said the authorities made a concerted effort to persuade doctors not to continue with the stir as infections like swine flu and seasonal diseases were affecting the common man.

He expressed hope that resident doctors will call off their agitation as Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot has promised to examine their grievances.

A section of the doctors in Jodhpur had last night called off their agitation after authorities assured of a thorough probe into the incident.

On Saturday night, attenders of an injured patient Nemi Chand Mali allegedly misbehaved with resident doctors on duty at MDM government hospital in Jodhpur, official sources said.

A scuffle soon broke out between the medics and the kin of the patient following which police resorted to lathicharge to control the situation, they said.

Demanding action against senior police and administration officials, private and government doctors went on a strike in around 40 hospitals in Jodhpur, while resident doctors have stopped work in Jaipur, Kota, Ajmer and Bikaner.

Discuss this story on expressindia forums
Post Comments
Name* Email ID*
Subject* Country*
Message*
Characters remaining
 
TERMS OF USE: The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
I agree to the terms of use.
What about the Hippocratic Oath? by Vivek on 07 Sep 2010

Every doctor before he begins his medical profession takes a Hippocratic Oath. In this oath he swears that he will not deny medical treatment to anyone in need. Since the doctors are doing exactly that, they should be stripped off their medical degrees. But who will rein in the doctors. Medical Council of India is busy making money off private medical collages.

Latest News

Business

Showbiz

Sports

As India stare at whitewash, an era’s end is upon them

Truce in battle of biometrics: Both collect

EC-Law Ministry cold war heats up, this time over poll institute

To help Rahul, Priyanka set to speak to party workers in ‘75-80’ UP seats

Desire for 'high lifestyle' driving educated girls to sex trade: SC

Cong advertisement in Gujarat praises Modi

Dravid likely to announce retirement shortly

More
© 2011 The Indian Express Limited. All rights reserved
Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Express Group | Site Map