City
Epaper

SC seeks govt's response on plea on violence against doctors

By IANS | Updated: September 6, 2019 19:25 IST

The Supreme Court on Friday issued a notice to the Centre, the Health Ministry and the Law Ministry on a petition seeking steps to protect doctors and medical professionals from physical attacks.

Open in App

The petition has been filed by the Tamil Nadu chapter of the Association of Healthcare Providers (India) or AHPI. It has been filed on behalf of 56 private hospitals in Tamil Nadu. The petitioners sought directions from the apex court to the government for taking immediate action against people attacking medical professionals and causing damage to medical establishments.

"Small and medium-sized private health care establishments, which provide the bulk of healthcare services, are isolated, disorganised and vulnerable to violence. Violence against health service providers is only a manifestation of this malady," claimed the petition.

A bench comprising Justices N.V. Ramana and Ajay Rastogi issued the notice and sought response from the Centre and other concerned ministries. The petition was filed through senior advocate K. Subramanian.

"As per the ongoing study conducted by the Indian Medical Association (IMA), more than 75 per cent of the doctors across the country have faced at least some form of violence in the past," said the petition.

The petition claimed that India faces a unique problem of growing violence against doctors, which arises from meager government spending on healthcare resulting in poor infrastructure and human resource crunch in government hospitals.

It said that only 1.3 per cent of the GDP is directed towards healthcare in India.

"As per the Universal Health Coverage NHP (National Health Policy) 2017, 4 per cent of GDP should be allocated for health. This data does not reflect that health is a priority for the country," said the petition.

Incidents of violence against doctors are reported nearly on a daily basis across India, some resulting in grievous injuries. The Prevention of Violence Against Medicare Persons and Institutions Acts, which have been notified in 19 states in the past 10 years, have failed to address the issue, contended the petitioners.

The petition also claimed that in the absence of any positive action by the local police, the medical fraternity has become a soft target for the hooligans, leading to serious repercussions on patient care. It is the main reason why doctors are reluctant to serve in the rural areas.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: indiaTamil NaduIndian Medical AssociationAjay RastogiK Subramanian
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalTamil Nadu Road Accident: Speeding Bus Hits Car and Bike; Disturbing Footage Goes Viral

InternationalIranian President Calls for Constructive Role of Brics to Halt West Asia Conflict During Talks With PM Modi

NationalTamil Nadu Rain: Heavy Showers Trigger Waterlogging in Madurai, Disrupt Daily Life

LifestyleEid 2026 Date: When Will Saudi Arabia, UAE and India Celebrate Eid-ul-Fitr?

NationalTamil Nadu Assembly Election 2026: Voting on April 23, Counting on May 4

National Realted Stories

NationalOdisha Guv fills VC posts in 14 varsities after criticism over vacancies​

NationalKalpakkam nuclear reactor reflects India’s engineering enterprise: PM Modi​

NationalAmaravati gets statutory status as Andhra Pradesh capital

NationalPM Modi is using proposed changes in Women's Reservation Act as election issue: Jairam Ramesh

NationalUttar Pradesh: Court reserves verdict in Azam Khan PAN card case appeal, order on April 20