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India
Criticised For Not Ensuring Palliative Care
BY
PRAKASH JOSHI 
NEW
DELHI (IDN) - A new report praises India for increasing funds for cancer
control but criticises that many major cancer hospitals in India do not
provide patients with morphine. And this despite the fact that more than
70 percent of their patients are incurable and likely to require pain
treatment and palliative care. Health centers offering services to
people living with HIV similarly do not have morphine or doctors trained
to prescribe it.
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According to the Human
Rights Watch (HRW), hundreds of thousands of patients in India unnecessarily
experience excruciating pain, because of restrictive drug regulations, lack of
training for health care workers, and poorly integrated care result in
needless suffering for patients because they cannot get inexpensive and
effective pain medications.
The
102-page report, ‘Unbearable Pain: India's Obligation to Ensure Palliative
Care’, carries some selected quotes by patients:
"It felt as if someone was pricking me with needles. I just kept crying
[throughout the night]. With that pain you think death is the only
solution." - Priya, Hyderabad, a woman with breast cancer.
"My leg would burn like a chili on your tongue. The pain was so severe I
felt like dying. I was very scared. I felt that it would be better to die than
to have to bear this pain. [I thought], just remove the leg, then it will be
alright. Just get rid of the leg so I'll be free of pain." - Dilawar
Joshi, Hyderabad, a Nepali man with a bone tumor.
"I would sleep maybe an hour and a half per night. I could take any
number of sleeping pills [without effect]. With morphine, I can relax. This
place [the palliative care unit] is heaven-sent..." - Shruti Sharma,
Hyderabad, a breast cancer patient.
"I had pain in my back and both legs. My legs twisted into an abnormal
position. My legs would turn inside and my toes up. It was a pricking pain
that was excruciating. I could not sleep as the pain was particularly bad at
night." - Pillai, Trivandrum, a patient with spinal TB and HIV.
"I developed severe pain all over the abdomen and in the area of my
genitals. It was a continuous, throbbing pain that radiated to the back. It
made me very irritable and frustrated. I went back to the doctor three or four
times to say that I had pain and wasn't getting any relief. I would get new
medicines but they would still provide no relief." - Kamala Kanwar,
Jaipur, patient with cervical cancer.
The report points out that severe pain is a common symptom among cancer
patients, particularly during the last stages of the disease. It is estimated
that more than one million advanced cancer patients in India experience severe
pain in any given year. In addition, many other patients, including those with
HIV, TB, or other infections or illness, may face acute or chronic severe
pain.
The report is the first by an international human rights organization to
examine access to pain relief medicines from a rights perspective. Human
Rights Watch believes that governments have an obligation to ensure that
essential medicines, including morphine, are available to patients and that
health care workers receive adequate training in their use. The report says
that the failure by the Indian government to fulfill this obligation violates
the right to health.
The HRW report identifies three key obstacles to improving the availability of
pain treatment and palliative care:
Restrictive drug regulations. Many Indian states have excessively strict
narcotics regulations that make it very difficult for hospitals and pharmacies
to get morphine. In 1998, the central government recommended that states adopt
modified regulations, but more than half of India's states have not done so.
The failure to train doctors. Most medical students and young doctors receive
no training on pain treatment and palliative care because the government does
not include such instruction in relevant curricula. As a result, most doctors
in India simply do not know how to assess or treat severe pain.
Poor integration of palliative care into health services. National cancer and
AIDS control programs do not contain meaningful palliative care components,
thus depriving such care of public funds and relegating it to second-tier
status.
"India is one of the world's largest legal producers of opium, the raw
material for morphine," says Diederik Lohman. "But almost all of it
is exported while hundreds of thousands -- if not millions -- of Indians
suffer needlessly."
The report focuses specifically on the availability of pain treatment for
cancer patients. It says that, based on official morphine consumption reports,
fewer than four percent of patients with advanced cancer have access to
appropriate pain treatment. The report also says that increased government
funding for cancer has not emphasized palliative care.
"The Indian government deserves credit for investing in regional cancer
centers and increasing funds for cancer control," Lohman says. "But
without specific efforts to ensure that all cancer hospitals can treat pain
and offer palliative care, these funds will do little to relieve the suffering
for patients with advanced, incurable cancer."
Human Rights Watch further argues that the government's failure to ensure that
cancer hospitals offer pain treatment may violate the prohibition against
torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment because of the widespread
nature and severity of the suffering it causes. HRW says that much of this
suffering could be prevented with relatively basic and inexpensive steps.
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