India: Unlicensed doctor ‘infects 40 people’ with HIV

An unlicensed doctor used a single syringe on his patients in Unnao district of Uttar Pradesh, local media reports.

A student displays his face and hand painted with messages during an HIV/AIDS awareness campaign on the occasion of World AIDS Day in Chandigarh, India, December 1, 2017. REUTERS/Ajay Verma TPX IMAGES
A student displays his face and hand painted with messages during an HIV/AIDS awareness campaign on the occasion of World AIDS Day in Chandigarh, India. [File: Ajay Verma/Reuters]

At least 40 people have been tested HIV positive in India‘s northern state of Uttar Pradesh, where an unqualified doctor had allegedly used a single syringe to treat all of his patients in the area, according to local media reports.

The news broke on Tuesday, months after the victims, including children, were diagnosed at a health camp organised by an NGO in November last year in Bangarmau city of Unnao district, reported Times Now news channel.

{articleGUID}

“Forty [HIV] positive cases have been found [among 400 tested people]. If proper tests are done, at least 500 cases would come up,” Sunil Bangarmau, an area councillor, told ANI – a local news wire outlet.

“It is being told that the people here used to go to a quack for treatment of diseases. He used a single syringe on all of them.”

Siddharth Nath Singh, Uttar Pradesh health minister, promised a crackdown on unqualified medics across the state.

“The matter is being investigated. Action will be taken against culprits and those who practice without a license,” he told ANI.

Advertisement

Rajendra Yadav, the accused in the particular case, is believed to be in hiding since the launch of the police investigation.

Source: Al Jazeera

Advertisement