Friday, April 9, 2010

ARTICLE FROM THE DAILY STAR BANGLADESH 7 APR 2010

I am in Bangladesh for the first time and I came across this article from their newspaper. Please read it as life here seems cheap and the poor are often victimised. I may be wrong but this is what I perceive after 3 days here. Imagine if this happened to your daugther.

Contemptible!

How could the intern do it?

ONE would have thought what marked out a living organism from an inanimate object is the capacity for feeling. The marker ought to be nobler when you are a human being. You are simply expected to sense the pain and trauma of another who has been physically hurt with the same intensity as though you were the victim. Should you fail the test, you don't simply deserve to be called a human being. Not even perhaps an animal; as even some species exude kindness to the kindred.

The outrage is all the more pronounced if someone in the garb of a healer enacts cruelty by extracting live teeth from a small girl's tender gums. It has a particular poignancy, because coming from a slum-dwelling family, she was an easy, helpless pick, enticed away by a packet of biriani. She was placed under the wrenching instrument by an intern dentist who, without a blink of the eye, extracted two of her teeth. Bleeding profusely in the mouth, the girl was to inform her father of what she had gone through. The Rab acted promptly arresting a doctor of the City Dental College while looking for the intern who did it. They cannot go scot-free, should be brought to book as a survey is conducted to identify all such dens of malpractice.

For the perpetrator, the poor child was the guinea pig to experiment on, test the intern's skill of tooth extraction to make the grades and obtain certificate of a dentist. The principal of the college explained the reason why the girl's parent was not approached a priori in patently unconvincing terms -- either her parent was not available, or she is an abandoned child. It was part of what was claimed to be free dental treatment given to poor children.

Actually, we think, Rab has exposed a Pandora's box of abominable forms of exploitation of the poor resorted to by so-called medical institutions. Indeed, there has been a mushrooming of all sorts of outfits, many with pretenses for imparting professional education having no ethics but raw business. All because they can easily circumvent standard criteria for registration and periodic monitoring.

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