Kolkata trainee doctor’s rape-murder case brings to fore lack of safe workplaces for medicos at GGHs in Andhra Pradesh

The news that the doctor at the Kolkata hospital was resting in a seminar hall when she was attacked is deeply traumatising for us as we, too, lack a safe place to rest, say PG doctors

Updated - August 15, 2024 07:29 am IST - VIJAYAWADA

Junior doctors taking out a rally from Siddhartha Medical College condemning the rape and murder of an on-duty doctor at a Kolkata government college, in Vijayawada on Wednesday.

Junior doctors taking out a rally from Siddhartha Medical College condemning the rape and murder of an on-duty doctor at a Kolkata government college, in Vijayawada on Wednesday. | Photo Credit: K.V.S. Giri

The ghastly case of a rape and murder of an on-duty trainee doctor at R.G. Kar Government Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata has brought to the fore the lack of a safe workplace and facilities for post-graduate doctors at Government General Hospitals in Andhra Pradesh.

Track latest updates from the Kolkata doctor rape and murder case here

As part of their three-year course, every PG doctor has to work night shifts once in a week or more, depending on the department and also on the doctor strength in a given department. On any given day, 15-20 PG doctors are present at the new GGH here during night shifts, but all of them scattered.

“After studies, we leave for our night shift duty at around 7 p.m. and stay at the hospital up to 7 a.m. next day, and then come back to college. There are days when we work for 36 hours non-stop. If our requirement is not needed due to less patient load on a particular night, we have two options: either coming back to the hostel or sleeping on the hospital premises, both of which are unsafe for women,” said a PG woman doctor from Siddhartha Medical College in Vijayawada, who did not want to be identified.

Also read: Violence, most foul: Editorial on Kolkata doctor rape and murder 

There are two routes from the college to reach the new Government General Hospital, which is 300-450 metres away, and both are from within the campus, say the PG doctors who have gathered under a tent to condemn the horrific incident in Kolkata that has sent shockwaves across the country.

“But at odd hours, when we are going back to the hostel, we do not find any security guards around us. There are many of us who do not have a two-wheeler. It is scarier for them. And, should we decide to stay back at GGH, there are no dedicated resting rooms for us,” said another PG doctor, who also wished to remain unnamed.

“To know that the doctor at the Kolkata hospital was resting in the seminar hall when the incident took place is traumatising for us. It is a daily routine for most of us to rest wherever we find a comfortable seat at the hospital due to the lack of dedicated resting rooms for us,” said a woman medico of SMC, who is a member of the A.P. Junior Doctors Association (APJUDA). There are no clean washrooms at the new GGH, too, she said, adding they have to walk back all the way to the hostel if they want to use the washrooms.

Medicos at Kurnool Medical College also echo the views of their colleagues at SMC, stating that similar conditions prevail across most government medical colleges in Andhra Pradesh.

The medico also recalls how it is extremely common for them to receive verbal abuses and threats. “A first-year PG doctor received a rape threat from a patient’s kin once. We find ourselves alone and scared when we have to deliver bad news to relatives, some of whom come in groups and also in an inebriated condition. Security personnel must be posted outside ICUs,” she said, adding that the presence of CCTV cameras is hardly reassuring as several of them are defunct.

“What we demand is proper monitoring of the visitors entering the main gate of the hospital, strengthening of security personnel, functional CCTV cameras and resting rooms,” said P. Achyuth, a PG doctor from Kurnool Medical College (KMC) and APJUDA general secretary. He said many government hospitals in the State do not have resting rooms.

“Only today, an attendant verbally and physically abused a doctor at KMC. They filed a complaint and an FIR was registered,” Mr. Achyuth said, adding that this is the second such incident in a month. Earlier, when a first-year female doctor was walking back to her hostel at night on the campus, a man followed her and flashed his genitals to her.

While the new Vijayawada GGH Superintendent and Deputy Superintendent were unavailable for comment, sources from the Directorate of Medical Education said they would come up with an action plan in three days to address the concerns. If any college is found to be lacking in facilities for women doctors, work would be taken up immediately, they said.

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