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Families stay together – in celebration and tragedy. But this couple and their 15-year-old daughter are also bound by the experience of immense physical pain.
The father, a 60-year-old man has chemical burns on his upper torso. The mother has 14 % chemical burns that run across her torso and arms. And the daughter has 99% burns on her face, and 55 % burns on her body.
The cornea of the 15-year-old’s right eye has melted and she will probably never be able to see again.
The girl has been battling for her life in the ICU ward of Indraprastha Apollo hospital for the last month. But hospitals were allegedly reluctant to treat the wounded teenager until they were forced to.
The Delhi Commission for Women (DCW) chairperson Swati Maliwal on Monday wrote to Health Minister Satyendar Jain seeking punitive action against Indraprastha Apollo Hospital, Jasola and the Army R&R Hospital for allegedly denying admission to the young girl when the family approached them on September 29 at 10 am.
Army R&R Hospital, as The Quint has learned, said they denied admission to the girl as she was not a direct ‘dependent’ of a serving personnel. The hospital, in its reply to the commission, however, stated that the victim was given an option of getting admission as a non-entitled case. Strangely, that wasn’t mentioned in writing when the admission was denied.
In April this year, the Supreme Court directed private hospitals to provide free treatment, including specialised surgeries, to acid attack victims and asked government authorities to take action against them if they failed to comply with the order.
Indraprastha Apollo Hospital, in its reply to the commission, accepted that the victim was made to wait in the ambulance for four hours. But the hospital has refuted allegations that the patient was denied treatment and that money was demanded from her.
The mother still curses the moment when her daughter said she would sleep with her on her bed on the terrace that fateful night (sleeping on the terrace under a mosquito net is a commonplace thing in Indian villages). The uninvited guests who came that night threw acid on everyone present at the time.
While the daughter is lying in the ward of her hospital, unable to speak, she still signals her mother to come and sit next to her for hours. The doctors ask, “What will your mother do by standing next to you.”
For her mother, this rings painfully true, even for that night when she couldn’t do anything as her daughter slept next to her.