A Maternity Ward Experience…

Posted: June 24, 2011 in Everyday

In my line of work, you get to witness eye opening events on a daily basis. Sometimes miracles happen but other times misery and helplessness takes over.  One fine day in the gynecology ward of our shabby ill-maintained government hospital I meet this woman, lying half dead on a dirty hospital bed in an under-ventilated overpopulated ward. She came in a state of shock with 20% of blood drained from her body. She had given birth to a 7kg baby at 3am in a private clinic and went into postpartum hemorrhage after which she never stopped bleeding. By 9am she lost consciousness and was rushed to the hospital. There was chaos all around as the doctors quickly got to checking her vitals and assessing her condition. The stench of blood filled my nostrils and made my stomach churn.

The other patients and attendants were stricken with fear as they watched the senior lady doctors bark orders at the juniors and nurses. Her blood was quickly sent to the blood bank for typing. She turned out to be an A negative. However there was no blood available at the moment and whatever there was the hospital was not willing to give it. The woman was administered a haemacel drip to increase her blood pressure which had already dropped to a lethal low. Gauze packs were rapidly placed and replaced between her legs but the blood would not stop. The professor of that ward scolded the juniors on not taking the woman to ICU the moment she arrived. Excuses about incomplete procedures and arrangements were mumbled.  Panic began to settle like a heavy cloud in that dingy 8bed ward as the woman stopped breathing. The blood still had not arrived. It turned out that the woman’s only attendant, her mother in law was an A negative. She however, was unwilling to give blood. The doctors requested her, plead her and then reprimanded her but she was adamant.  During that entire ordeal, she looked around unbothered in a rather bored manner which infuriated doctors even more. The professor even threatened her that she would take in writing from her that she could have saved her daughter in law’s life but she had refused to. But the woman did not appear any more concerned than she already was.

Some watched in pity, the whole scenario. Others whispered in horror of the the helplessness of the doctors and the hopelessness of a mother in law. Another 10% of blood had drained from the woman’s body as she became more and more lifeless. Cardiac massage was continually being performed on her in a desperate attempt to keep her alive. Finally a bag of blood arrived. The nurse clumsily fumbled with a stand to hang the bag from. A student reminded her that the blood was the greater priority upon which she  quickly administered it but to no avail. The woman had left this world. And the moment the mother in law realized that the doctors had given up, she let out a huge scream. She started slapping her face and her chest like a madwoman, screaming out curses at the good-for-nothing doctors who couldn’t do anything to save her beloved daughter. I watched open mouthed as the other attendants dragged her out of the ward and into the corridor where she lay screaming even harder. The doctors walked out in dejection while the nurses draped the dead woman who had hardly seen 25years in this world. The horror and the tragedy of it shook us to the core. The horror was in a life that could have been saved. The tragedy lay in our empty conscience and selfishness. The screaming woman got up and came to the bedside, pulled out the pair of gold earrings from the corpse’s ears and then serenely walked out the door to re continue her tantrum and her cries of woe for the benefit of the men of the family.

 

Comments
  1. First of all this was the responsibility of the doctor to shift that patient to ICU & arrange emergency blood but if for certain reason they couldn’t do that then they were suppose to ask the patient attendant for blood donation that is if she or he wants to donate blood willingly , U cant force someone to donate blood as most people in Pakistan are not fully aware of the fact that blood donation wont do any bad to u , These people have misconception about medical treatments and the way they work , They need to be educated this is what our country needs in first place , No matter how much our government is trying people living in backward areas are not cooperating by getting their children educated they don’t even send there children to schools , unfortunately this would continue unless n until people get sufficient knowledge about medical and other fields of life

    • Talking Tom says:

      errr…. :p u thought too much about it :p I totally agree with you sir 😀

    • Shukrya Khan says:

      i was there and it was mankind at its worst believe me or maybe we r new at this and once we r professionals we’ll get used to scenes like these! it is the responsibility of doctors to arrange for blood but in Pakistan its nearly impossible to arrange blood from a blood bank without a donor and the doctors there did everythin they could

      • Talking Tom says:

        yeah that day even the doctors were trying. well that woman died but i thought i should write about it. it was something that effected me too. i still cant forget that mother in law ke harkatein :@

  2. Reading this made me feel terrible. Even though I have nothing to do with the medical field I think things like this must happen a lot in the country but we don’t hear about it. She either was one of “those” mother in laws to whom their son is the greatest and most prized asset in the world, or she plain and simply hated her daughter in law. I mean what would compel one to go to the point of rejecting means of saving someone’s life? 😦

    Thank you for writing about this.

  3. This is really an amazing story. It captured the emotions perfectly. Well written too, I got goosebumps as my mind was picturizing the whole scene.

  4. jiya princess says:

    o my GOD !!!!!!!!! this is awfull :@@@@@ :((( unbearable ,,,,,,,,!!!!

  5. samra says:

    heart wrenching. its extremely unfortunate. and in a scenario like this u only look at the immediate cause which, here, is the mother in law. blood was needed, she refused to give it! on a side note, the mismanagement and panic is all time condemnable.

    • Talking Tom says:

      this type of thing wasnt supposed to happen in a public ward. There were women watching. and the lady doctors… well I have rarely seen women with composure in such instances. It was all a combination of mismanagement and misfortune 😦

  6. OMG…that is just INSANE…:O
    PS: nice blog…reallyy good effort.

  7. umema says:

    a very true insight into the actual heath condition of our countary.

  8. razi khan says:

    This whole ordeal shows the common behaviour of Pakistani people . Been reading all my life we need education in Pakistan i don’t think we need education we need to change our behaviour we are the highest charity giving country in the 3rd world. its the taboos and trends we need to break . i have seen my self a person having 3 sons and 6 grand sons but when he needed blood they paid some one to give blood for them.well i am not sure when will that happen but i hope it happen soon for our nation coz we are on a very bad path right now .
    great blog well write plz do write again

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