After a wait of 10 years, the
South Mumbai Consumer Disputes Redressal Forum recently directed the doctors
and the Bombay Hospital & Medical Research Centre to grant a compensation
of Rs 5 lakh to a woman who contracted a life-threatening virus after
undergoing a hysterectomy.
In July 2007, 53 year old Ms
MD had a hysterectomy performed at the hospital and in September the same year,
she developed Hepatitis ‘C’ (itching, fever and yellow eyes). She sought a
compensation of Rs 19.71 lakh from the respondents.
The forum held that Ms.
Diwakar suffered from Hepatitis C, and has to take regular drugs and medicines
to control it, for which she has to bear the medical expenses. She is suffering
from heavy financial loss as well as mental torture and her reputation in
society is also badly affected. The doctors and the hospital were held guilty
of deficiency in service and medical negligence. It said she needs to receive
Rs 5 lakh as “token compensation for the grave irreversible and irreparable
mental agony, life-long restrictions, financial losses, loss of reputation in
society and risk to family members caused by gross medical negligence.”
The hospital and doctors were
directed to pay Rs 10,000 as litigation costs to the family while the hospital
has to pay Rs56,000 towards reimbursement of bills.
Comments
· The
global prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, as reflected by
anti-HCV antibody positivity, is around 2.8% i.e. at any given time 2.8% people
will be positive for hepatitis C.
· In
hospital setting, the transmission of hepatitis C it can occur via unsafe
syringe or with unsafe blood transfusion
· Infection
can also be acquired by unsafe sex. You can be positive at the time of
hospitalisation and acquire it after discharge with unsafe sex.
· Most
cases of acute hepatitis C infection are anicteric and asymptomatic; only less
than 25% cases have clinically apparent infection. Fulminant hepatitis C is
rare.
· The
window period for HCV is 6 to 9 weeks from the moment the person became
infected. Hepatitis C antibody test during the window period yields a negative
result.
· All
cases of acute hepatitis C may not progress to chronic hepatitis (infection
that persists for more than 6 months).
· Treatment
is required only after six months if person develops hepatitis C.
· Hepatitis
C is curable today.
· There
is no way to tell that the person acquired hepatitis during a particular
admission unless you show at the time of admission the person was negative for
both hepatitis C antibodies and HCV RNA test.
·
This was an interested case to have been fought on
scientific basis.
Dr KK Aggarwal
Padma Shri Awardee
President Elect Confederation of
Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania
(CMAAO)
Group Editor-in-Chief IJCP Publications
President Heart Care Foundation of
India
Past National President
IMA
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