
‘Stop Criminalizing Doctors!’ was the cry of doctors against a Supreme Court ruling which found three doctors guilty of malpractice. Photo by Akbar Gumay, Copyright @Demotix (11/27/2013)
In 2010, Makatey, a nurse working in a remote town in Papua, was supposed to deliver her third child in her hometown Manado. Makatey's father accused the obstetricians of negligence saying that they left his laboring daughter without surveillance or proper treatment for 13 hours.
In 2011, the North Sulawesi Chapter of Medical Ethics Board cleared the three obstetricians of negligence or ethical violations. But the Supreme Court found the doctors guilty of the charge.
On Wednesday (11/27), doctors conducted a nationwide walkout against the malpractice sentence issued by the Supreme Court against a few of their colleagues. Doctors, medical students, and health professionals are sharing their thoughts about the case and the protest that followed:
Seluruh dokter di-Indonesia bersama-sama #tolak #kriminalisasi. Kali ini di Manado, jangan sampai terjadi di daerah lainnya
— Andi Khomeini Takdir (@dokterkoko) November 18, 2013
All the doctors in Indonesia rejecting the criminalization. This time in Manado, don't let it happen in other regions.
Stop kriminalisasi dokter! #sejawat #aksi #solidaritas #tolak #kriminalisasi #dokter http://t.co/bIQ6N5wmpN — Aldila Kun, S. Ked (@heyimdila) November 26, 2013
Stop criminalizing doctors! #colleagues
Be wise people, use ur brain, secara prinsip, dokter pasti ingin menyelamatkan org lain, bukan utk membunuh seseorang #kriminalisasi #dokter — Michael Christi (@mchristis) November 26, 2013
In principle, doctors want to save others, not kill them.
If people don't appreciate doctors presence, what about make'em appreciate doctors absence ? Just one day tho ☺ #stopkriminalisasidokter
— Alicia Virgina (@aLiciavirgina) November 27, 2013
We are human too. So, don't treat us like we are ‘God’ that can cure every disease and stop the death. #stopkriminalisasidokter
— Fathia (@AlFathiaRain) November 26, 2013
#SolidaritasDokter is touching and all but on a more relevant note: we need to draw a line between malpractice, risk, and criminalization.
— Andhyta F. Utami (@Afutami) November 27, 2013
Twitter users are split whether or not the protest is necessary or ethical:
Aksi mogok dokter se-Indonesia besok tidak mengundang simpati. Dukungan atas tuduhan malpraktik bisa dengan berbagai cara, bukan mogok Dok..
— Arief Suditomo (@AriefSuditomo) November 26, 2013
Nationwide doctor strike tomorrow will not generate public sympathy. The support against malpractice can be done in other ways, not by doing a strike, docs.
FARK YEAAAH! MDs in Indonesia need an attitude adjustment to be attentive to their patients more http://t.co/MsOAUpy8vD — Raziq Nazqua (@raziqnazqua) November 20, 2013
RT @csutanto: 3 dokter 1 nyawa, banyak dokter demo tgl 27. berapa nyawa? stop #malpraktek, dokter tdk kebal hukum #selamatkandokterindonesia — Stephanus Suryawan (@antikecoa) November 28, 2013
3 doctors, 1 life, many doctors to strike on the 27th. How many lives (will it cost)? Stop malpractice, doctors are not immune to law.
Aneh para #dokterburon kok dibela hingga para dokter telantarkan pasien di mana-mana http://t.co/z0p9CfEYhi #solidaritasdokter #malapraktik
— BM Wijayakusuma (@bmwijayakusuma) November 28, 2013
It's strange that renegade doctors are being defended by their colleagues, while patients everywhere are being abandoned.
While the doctors were out protesting, there were reports that some hospitals were refusing incoming patients. In a remote area of East Nusa Tenggara, a mother was even forced to deliver her baby in a clinic's restroom [ID] due to the walk-out.
The Indonesian Doctors Association clarified [id] that ER doctors and those working in public clinics will not join the solidarity protest.
Paulus Santosa, a public health consultant and maternal health program advisor said that in the past five years, maternal mortality in Indonesia has increased by 50 percent, the highest in Southeast Asia. Facebook user Stephen Suleeman, posted Santosa's reflection:
Dalam laporan tentang kematian maternal, yg disalahkan selalu para bidan, yg dikatakan bahwa kwalitas keterampilan mereka rendah. Sekarang, ketika seorang dokter spesialist dihukum, semua dokter anggota IDI dan Dinas Kesehatan mogok dan demo dijalan. “Kematian itu ada ditangan Tuhan dan bukan dokter” kata para pen-demo. Mereka yg demo tahu siapa nama dokter yg dihukum, tetapi mereka banyak yg tidak tahu dan peduli nama dari Fransiska dan ribuan ibu yg mati di fasilitas kesehatan. Tidak ada satupun yg prihatin kalau angka kematian ibu di Indonesia adalah yg terbesar diantara negara tentangga. Tidak satu pun yg prihatin kalau selama 5 tahun ini kematian ibu melonjak 50%. “Kematian itu ada ditangan Tuhan”, lantas mengapa kita repot bicara penurunan angka kematian ibu. Doakan saja di tempat ibadah dan target MDG akan tercapai.
Maternal death reports often blame midwives for their lack of skills. Now when a specialist doctor is being punished, members of the Indonesian Doctors Association and Health Agency are striking and protesting in the streets. “Death lies in the hands of God, not doctors” said the protesters. Those who protest know the names of the implicated doctors, but most of them don't know or care the name of Fransiska and thousands of mothers who died in health facilities. Nobody was concerned that Indonesia's maternal mortality rate is the highest compared to its neighbor countries. Nobody was concerned that in the past 5 years, the maternal mortality has increased by 50%. “Death lies in the hands of God”, if so, then why should we bother talking about reducing maternal deaths. We should better pray about it and hope to reach the MDG targets.