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RG Kar & T'gana docs defy SC's appeal to resume work

Resident doctors of RG Kar hospital and Hyderabad have decided to continue with the strike. While RG Kar's primary demand is to arrest all those involved in the rape and murder of the doctor, Hyderabad resident doctors want concrete assurance and measures to strengthen security for medicos by the state government.

News Arena Network - Kolkata - UPDATED: August 23, 2024, 03:50 PM - 2 min read

SC's appeal go unheard; RG Kar doctors continue stir

RG Kar & T'gana docs defy SC's appeal to resume work

Glimpse of protest by doctors demanding justice for RG Kar victim.


Except West Bengal and Hyderabad, resident doctor’s associations of all other states have called off their strike. 

 

In Bengal, the epicentre of the protests, healthcare services remained affected at state-run hospitals as agitating junior doctors have said they would continue their ceasework.

 

Medicos and senior resident doctors from government teaching hospitals in Telangana and Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences (NIMS) in Hyderabad are continuing with the indefinite boycott of outpatient (OP), elective surgeries and academics, till concrete assurances and measures to strengthen security are taken by the state government.

 

The medicos and resident doctors have continued to express their concerns over the lack of proper measures to address their grievances over safety and security in government hospitals of Telangana.

 

Aniket Mahato, a postgraduate trainee at RG Kar and one of the leaders of the protest: “We respect the Supreme Court but most of the junior doctors are of the opinion that the cease-work should continue till our primary demand is met.” 

 

Till their primary demand of arresting all those involved in the rape and murder of the doctor is met, RG Kar resident doctors will continue with the strike. 

 

However, in a major relief for patients, hundreds of resident doctors across the nation returned to work on Friday after ending their 11-day strike over the alleged rape and murder of a medic in Kolkata, following an appeal by the Supreme Court.

 

Healthcare professionals across the country ceased work after the body of the medic, a junior doctor, was found in a seminar room of the West Bengal government-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata on August 9.

 

Non-emergency services, including OPD and diagnostics, were shut as medics, including resident doctors, of major central and Delhi government-run hospitals struck work on August 12 evening, causing hardships for patients and delay in treatment. 

 

Resident doctors, including those of Centre-run AIIMS, RML Hospital, Lady Hardinge Medical College and Delhi government-run LNJP, Maulana azad Medical College, GTB Hospital and Indira Gandhi Hospital, resumed duties after two national bodies announced the end of the strike on Thursday evening. 

 

The Federation of Resident Doctors Association (FORDA) and the Federation of All India Medical Association (FAIMA) took the decision after the Supreme Court issued directions about the safety of healthcare personnel.

 

While it appealed to medics across the country to rejoin duty and assured that no coercive action will be taken against them, the top court also said judges and doctors cannot go on a strike since they deal with matters involving life and liberty.

 

Resident doctor at the GTB Hospital in Delhi, Aman Khanna, said, “I’m glad to return to work with the hope that our demands will be fulfilled and justice will be served. We are closely observing the decisions the government is making for us.”

 

Medics have been demanding a central law to check violence against healthcare professionals at the workplace. 

 

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