domingo, 1 de marzo de 2020

BioEdge: South African doctors sterilised women without consent

BioEdge: South African doctors sterilised women without consent

Bioedge

South African doctors sterilised women without consent
    
Bongekile Msibi says she never signed a consent form / supplied
State hospitals in South Africa have sterilized some pregnant HIV-positive women without their consent, according to a report by the Commission for Gender Equality.
One of the 48 documented complainants, Bongekile Msibi, told the BBC that she was only 17 when her uterus was removed after she gave birth to a daughter. It was only 11 years later that she discovered what had happened. Eventually she confronted the doctor who had performed the hysterectomy:
He did not say sorry. He told me that he had sterilised me in order to save my life. I still do not know what he was trying to save me from. There are no records at the hospital. I am not the only one. An inquiry has found there are 47 others. Some were told it was because they had HIV, but I do not. I just don't know why they did it.
The doctor told me that I had signed a consent form. I had not. I was a minor at the time so would not have been able to. He then said my mother, who was with me at the birth, had signed the consent form. She said she did not.
An investigation by the Women’s Legal Centre documented 48 cases in which women were allegedly either forced or coerced into agreeing to the procedure while giving birth.
The CGE’s report declared that the women “were subjected to cruel, torturous or inhuman and degrading treatment” and that “the medical staff breached their duty of care to the patients”. Many women did not understand the consent forms that they had signed. 
While the report did not estimate how many women may have been affected, it would be wrong to assume that forced sterilisations are a thing of the past, Nasreen Solomons, of Women’s Legal Centre, told Time magazine.
Michael Cook is editor of BioEdge
Bioedge

“Progressive! Individuals have a right to ‘self-determined’ suicide, including the freedom to take one's own life and to enlist support provided by third parties. German court rules assisted suicide ban violates citizens' rights to determine their own death.”

This was tweeted by Philip Nitschke, Australia’s indefatigable campaigner for an unfettered right to die. It was a good summary of a decision by the German Federal Constitutional Court on Wednesday, which declared that banning assisted suicide was against Germany’s ‘Basic Law’.

From now on people will be free to seek commercial assistance to help them die. (At least doctors won’t be co-opted, for the moment.) This opens up all sorts of business opportunities. Will there be death doulas in every funeral home? Watch this space.



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Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
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