HomeNewsOpinionKashmir | IMA’s stand betrays the Hippocratic Oath

Kashmir | IMA’s stand betrays the Hippocratic Oath

The Lancet is not selective in its outrage, as it has commented on India’s healthcare in the past: in 1901 it criticised the British for the famine deaths in India, and in 2018 it supported the IMA’s stand on the National Medical Commission Bill.

May 11, 2020 / 14:25 IST
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In one way, the ugly spat between the Indian Medical Association (IMA) and the Lancet, a globally acclaimed scientific journal, puts the spotlight on the deprivation of human rights and the plight of the Kashmiris in the wake of the undemocratic revocation of Jammu & Kashmir’s special status and the division of the state into two separate union territories — Jammu & Kashmir with a legislature and Ladakh without an assembly.

It also lays bare the IMA’s acquiescence to the government’s decision to impose a strict clampdown in the Himalayan state that has severely choked the access of people to hospitals and healthcare.

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Despite a communication blackout in the Kashmir valley (the few landlines that existed are working in select pockets), a few news reports have described the suffering being borne because of curfew restrictions. Government agencies have reported that the restrictions are being lifted, in a phased manner across the state. With harsh limitations on free movement, patients and those in need of medical attention who are bearing the brunt of this three-week long lockdown.

Some reports suggest that hospital staff, such as doctors and nurses, are facing difficulties in reaching out to relatives of victims of accidents. Moreover, the first two weeks of the curfew, imposed on August 5, were the toughest for doctors and other health staff as well. Many of them who lived far couldn’t return home and those who were off-duty could not report back to work.