Delhi doctors’ strike completes a week; action plan chalked out for today

Members of resident doctors’ associations in Delhi take out candle-light march from outside Gate 1 of the Rajiv Chowk Metro Station at Connaught Place

Update: 2024-08-19 02:37 GMT
Members of various Resident Doctors' Associations protest during a candle march against the alleged rape and murder of a woman doctor at Kolkata's RG Kar Medical College and Hospital, at Connaught Place, in New Delhi, on Sunday | PTI

The doctors’ strike in Delhi over the rape and murder of a postgraduate trainee doctor at Kolkata’s state-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital completed a week on Sunday (August 18), as non-emergency services, including OPD, remained paralysed.

Protests began in Delhi on Monday evening. Initially restricted to medical college campuses, doctors started taking to the streets from Friday over the August 9 incident in Kolkata.

According to an action plan, members of resident doctors’ associations (RDA) in Delhi took out a candle light march from outside Gate 1 of the Rajiv Chowk Metro Station at Connaught Place.

Resident doctors’ march

Dr Parth Mishra, vice-president of UCMS and GTB Hospital RDA, told news agency PTI that as discussed, resident doctors from medical institutions participated in the march.

The demonstrators, who are demanding a central law to check violence against on-duty health personnel and justice for their peer, formed a human chain in the Connaught Place Inner Circle.

Efforts were also made to interact with the public to raise awareness about the incident.

Monday’s plan

Those who took part in the march, which ended around 9 pm, raised slogans in support of their demands. They displayed placards demanding justice for the victim and one them read “when the white coat turns red, society turns black”.

A few children holding the tricolour were also spotted in the march.

Late Sunday, resident doctors announced that their strike will continue. In an action plan for Monday, a meeting is scheduled for 9 am in front of the GTB Hospital’s gate.

Following the meeting, the doctors will proceed to Nirman Bhawan at 11 am, according to a statement from the Action Committee for the Central Protection Act, which represents all RDAs of Delhi.

“Threat” from hospitals

Dr Dhruv Chauhan, health activist and national council member of the Indian Medical Association’s junior doctors’ network, alleged, “Some hospital administrations are threatening doctors to return to duty while they are peacefully protesting for their rights.”

“Does this mean we don’t even have the freedom to exercise our right to speech and protest as permitted by the Constitution?” he asked. If the authorities had issued as many circulars to protect doctors’ rights and security, such an incident might never have happened, Chauhan added.

The strike has affected academic activities, outpatient departments (OPDs), ward services, and elective surgeries at public as well as private health facilities.

Essential emergency services, including Intensive Care Units (ICUs), emergency procedures, and emergency surgeries, continue to operate.

Appeal to President

A group of distinguished Padma Awardee doctors has urgently appealed to the President of India for immediate intervention following a Kolkata incident.

In a letter expressing deep concern and anguish, the doctors condemned the brutal events that have shaken the medical community and the nation at large.

The doctors highlighted the rise in violence against healthcare professionals, particularly against women and girls said, “Such acts of brutality shake the very foundations of service by medical professionals,” the letter read.

In their appeal, the Padma Awardee doctors have urged law enforcement agencies, policymakers, and society at large to take decisive steps to ensure the safety and dignity of healthcare professionals across the nation.

Centre’s assurance

On Saturday, the Union health ministry in a statement assured that it would form a panel for suggesting measures to boost the safety of healthcare personnel.

It had said representatives of all stakeholders, including the state governments, will be invited to share their suggestions with the committee as it urged the doctors to resume their duties in the larger public interest and in view of the rising number of dengue and malaria cases.

A resident doctor from Safdarjung Hospital said a concrete response from the government regarding bringing the central law would have offered some relief.

“However, after seven days, we are still waiting. As stated earlier, the strike will continue indefinitely until our demands are met,” the doctor said.

(With agency inputs)

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