SHC moved against unlicensed healthcare institutions
KARACHI: The Sindh High Court (SHC) on Wednesday issued notices to the federal and provincial health departments, the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council, the Sindh Health Care Commission and others on a petition seeking action against unlicensed healthcare establishments in the province.
Petitioners Jaffer Raza and Asad Iftikhar submitted in the petition that several patients, including nine-month-minor girl Nashwa had died due to alleged medical negligence on the part of private healthcare institutions.
They submitted that medical negligence at such a regular frequency only indicated that the issue was rampant in our society and could only be attributed to weak laws and even weaker implementation. They said that the apathy and callousness of medical practitioners and healthcare establishments had only contributed to the menace to the extent that there was hardly a citizen who had been not been directly or indirectly affected by medical negligence.
The petitioners added that there were countless instances of medical negligence whereby people had lost their lives due to improper treatment and those very medical practitioners continued risking the lives of many more as there was no proper system of checks and balances.
They said the Sindh Healthcare Commission Act was promulgated in 2013 which also provided for the promulgation of a commission with wide ranging powers, including powers for conducting inquiries into malpractices and failures in the provisions of healthcare services.
The petitioners said that despite the lapse of several years the commission was not working properly, and had the commission’s powers been put to use, the society would not have experienced the horrific incidents of medical malpractice which were happening at an ever-increasing rate.
They said the healthcare commission was also authorised to monitor and regulate the quality and standards of healthcare services and to issue regulations and guidelines for the provisions of healthcare in Sindh; however, the law seemed far-fetched and fictitious with no implementation.
According to the petitioners, omissions and lapses on the part of the commission by failing to use its discretionary powers has led to medical practitioners and health care establishments enjoying unprecedented impunity whose grave negligence goes unchecked and without any legal repercussions.
They submitted that medical practitioners used medical jargons and terminologies to misguide the public at large and used the same as a veil to hide their own incompetence and negligence as the common man was easily deceived and did not take it upon himself to investigate the matter.
Referring to the Nashwa inquiry report by the commission, they said that it was mindboggling to see that the medical establishment had been let off the hook with just a nominal penalty despite the fact that 95 nurses at Darul Sehat Hospital were found to be unregistered and unqualified.
-
Minneapolis: ICE Officer Fires Bullet After Migrant Attacks With A Shovel -
Prince William Gets 'mobbed' By Animals During Rural Engagement -
Angelina Jolie Finally Escaping L.A.? -
Jodie Foster Reflects On Harsh Reality Of Why She Escaped Sexual Abuse As Actress -
Matthew McConaughey Takes Legal Action To Save THIS Iconic Phrase From AI Misuse -
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle To Have Baby In 2026? -
Bella Hadid Steals The Spotlight At 'The Beauty' Premiere -
Taylor Swift 'worst Photos': Singer's Not-so-perfect Moments Spark Debate -
Arizona Mother Traces Missing Son Living In Neighbour’s Home After Killing Hm -
OpenAI Launches ChatGPT Translate To Rival Google Translate -
Top AI Themes Poised To Shape 2026: Here’s How -
Meghan Markle Accused Of Stealing 'bookmark' Idea -
Leonardo DiCaprio Changes His Stance On THIS To Remain 'his Handsome Self' -
Girl Dies After Years Of Alleged Starvation By Mother In West Virginia -
Here’s How Many Under-16 Social Media Accounts Were Removed In Australia -
Drew Barrymore Gets Candid About The Words That Haunted Her Childhood