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Foetus on the street!

Updated on: 29 June,2010 08:18 AM IST  | 
Taw Nana |

Hospital dumps dead embryo among other medical waste on roadside

Foetus on the street!

Hospital dumps dead embryo among other medical waste on roadside

In a chilling reminder of the worth of human life in a bustling metropolis, pieces of a dead human foetus were spotted lying in a roadside dump in Patparganj, opposite Mother Dairy.
When the locals were queried about the origins of the waste that included syringes, gloves, blood-stained cotton and bandages, they pointed to a nearby maternity centre.


Horrible: Pieces of human embryo packed in polythene bags in Patparganj

Just a few hundred meters away from the dump stands Ram Lal Kundan Lal Orthopaedic Centre and RK Maternity Home. The hospital is the only private medical centre in the close vicinity and when this correspondent reached the hospital to enquire about the waste, the hospital staff refused to answer queries.

A ward boy in the hospital, requesting anonymity, told MiD DAY that the hospital does not have an incinerator and the waste is not segregated as per the government guidelines regarding the biomedical waste.u00a0 "I am not sure who dumped the waste there," he said.

Doctors in the hospital rubbished it, saying somebody else might have left it there. "We don't dump our waste like this," an orthopaedician with the hospital said, requesting anonymity.

However, the locals stressed on the fact that as RK maternity home and orthopaedic hospital is the only medical centre in the close vicinity, there is no chance that somebody else might have done it.
According to the Bio-medical waste (management and handling) Act 1998, the licence of any hospital found dumping medical waste in a public area shall be cancelled.

Medical waste is not harmful just for those who live around it but also the animals that might come in touch with the dump in search of food. Also, rag pickers most of whom are children are at the maximum risk of contracting serious infections from such waste.

Innocent bystanders at the Ganesh Nagar bus stand, situated just ten feet away from the garbage dump, have been exposed to dangerous infections and diseases due to the waste. "We know that the RK hospital staff dumped the waste over here, but what can we do? We don't know whom to complain, we mind our business


and never interfere," said a shopkeeper near the bus stand.



A spokesperson for MCD said, "We can't say anything as of now. We will check the waste dump and then initiate appropriate action."
What the law says

*u00a0Rules as laid down by the Bio-medical waste (management and handling) Act 1998, apply to hospitals, Nursing Homes, Veterinary Hospitals, Animal Houses, Pathological labs & blood banks, generating hospital wastes. (except such occupier of clinics, dispensaries, pathological labs, blood banks providing treatment/service to less than 1000 (one thousand) patients per month).
* It shall be the duty of the every occupier of an institution generating bio medical waste which includes a hospital, nursing home, clinic, dispensary, Veterinary institution animal house, pathological laboratory, blood bank by whatever name called to take all steps to ensure-that such waste is handled without any adverse effect to the human health and the environment.
* Every occupier generating the bio-medical waste need to install an appropriate facility in the premises or set up a common facility to ensure requisite treatment of waste in accordance and in compliance with standards prescribed.
* The bio medical waste need to be segregated into container/bags at the point of generation, prior to its storage, transportation, treatment and disposal.

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