‘Rusty’ instruments used at India sterilisation camp where 13 died

Officials said the victims showed signs of toxic shock, possibly because of dirty surgical equipment or contaminated medicines.

Women who underwent botched sterilisation surgeries at a government 'camp' receive treatment at a district hospital in Bilaspur, in the eastern Indian state of Chhattisgarh on November 10, 2014. Thirteen women have died of toxic shock after the surgeries. Reuters
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BHUBANESWAR, INDIA // The number of women who died at a mass sterilisation “camp” in India rose to 13 on Wednesday, after undergoing operations performed by a doctor accused of using rusty equipment.

The deaths highlight the dangers of the world’s largest surgical contraception programme.

The women, among more than 80 to undergo surgery, fell ill on Saturday at a so-called family planning camp at a village in Chhattisgarh. Such camps are held regularly in India as part of a long-running effort to control its booming population.

The cause of the deaths was not immediately clear, but officials said the victims showed signs of toxic shock, possibly because of dirty surgical equipment or contaminated medicines.

“Preliminary reports show that the medicines administered were spurious and also the equipment used was rusted,” government official Siddharth Komal Singh Pardeshi said.

The incident is an embarrassment for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose Bharatiya Janata Party rules in Chhattisgarh. He has vowed to reform India’s health system.

Mr Modi expressed concern over the tragedy on Tuesday.

The doctor, RK Gupta, had been accused of operating on more than 80 women in just a few hours with the help of two assistants in an abandoned private hospital, contravening government guidelines to limit such operations to 30 a day.

The local government has filed a police case against Dr Gupta for causing death due to negligence.

Dr Gupta blamed medicine the women had been later given and denied making any mistakes, according to local media. He could not be reached for comment.

A tubectomy procedure is considered major surgery but Indian doctors often exceed daily limits. Before guidelines were set there were reports doctors carried out as many as 200 surgeries a day, said Suneeta Mittal, head of gynaecology at Fortis Memorial Research Institute near New Delhi.

All the women have been hospitalised for observation and 20 are in critical condition, with many not responding to treatment, doctors said.

India carries out more female sterilisations than any other country. Sterilisation is the most popular form of birth control and the government provides cash and other incentives to encourage men and women to undergo the operation. Chhattisgarh is one of the poorest regions in India.

India’s winter is sometimes known as “sterilisation season” when the weather is cool, reducing the risk of infection, and state governments rush to meet targets before the end of the financial year in March.

A team of doctors had arrived in the district of Bilaspur from New Delhi to investigate.

To many in India’s medical establishment the surgery exemplifies an inhuman programme which relies on targets, bribes and coercion.

Workers from the Congress party, the main opposition in Chhattisgarh, have called for a state-wide strike.

* Reuters