In
addition to knowing about and treating their poison-ravaged bodies, the
people in Bhopal need research to know what lies in store for the
children born to gas-affected and contamination-affected parents.
Right to knowledge: A Bhopal gas
tragedy survivor sitting in protest in New Delhi.
India is considered to be the third largest scientific humanpower, yet
some of the most basic information on the Bhopal disaster remains
unavailable even after 23 years. While government scientific agencies
remain oblivious to this, the victims continue to struggle for such
knowledge. Sitting in Jantar Mantar after an 800-kilometre walk are 50
victims of the Union Carbide gas disaster demanding that the Prime
Minister who set up the Knowledge Commission set up an empowered
commission on Bhopal for medical research and health monitoring.
In 1985, some among the women padyatris had marched to the local
government hospital, holding bottles of urine. They demanded that
doctors examine their bodies to see if they should carry on or
terminate their pregnancies. They expected the doctors to test the
amount of thiocyanate in their urine for an evaluation of the toxins
circulating in their bodies. They wanted them to administer sodium
thiosulphate injection so that they could excrete some of the toxins
they had involuntarily inhaled on that terrible night. They were
worried that they might give birth to children with defects. The women
were denied medical tests and advice, and police chased them away with
sticks. Ironically, this happened in March 1985 when medical
researchers from the Indian Council of Medical Research were carrying
on a double blind clinical trial to test the efficacy of sodium
thiosulphate as a detoxificant for the gas exposed.
Teratogenic effect
While the fears of the women regarding the teratogenic effect of Union
Carbide’s gases were realised soon after, the results of the clinical
trial by the ICMR took 22 years to be published. Its conclusion —
sodium thiosulphate administered intravenously could indeed cause the
body to excrete the poisons circulating in the blood stream. ICMR’s
data indicates that over 23,000 people have died so far as a
consequence of the disaster.
Without doubt if ICMR’s results on sodium thiosulphate trial were made
known in 1985, just the simple administration of this inexpensive drug
could have saved many people.
Rest of the history of ICMR’s involvement in Bhopal is no less
scandalous. Twenty two of the 24 research projects carried out by ICMR
between 1985 and 1994 remain unpublished. For years after the disaster,
for reasons that remain unexplained, there was an official ban on
publication of medical research on Bhopal. The ban was lifted in 1996
but ICMR is yet to share its findings with doctors in Bhopal let alone
the 100,000 Bhopal people who were part of the studies.
While ICMR is keeping its Bhopal research findings boxed up, Union
Carbide continues to withhold unpublished research on the health
effects of Methyl Isocyanate, the poison gas. Over the last two decades
several requests made to the highest officials of Union Carbide to
disclose the findings of the research it carried out for several years
at the Carnegie-Mellon Institute at the University of Pittsburgh have
been denied. Just last month, the issue came up in the discussion of
the faculty of IIT Bombay with officials of Dow Chemical, Union
Carbide’s current owner. The officials declared unfamiliarity with the
research, promised to try and obtain the findings but would not commit
to a time line.
Union Carbide has not been as successful in suppressing information
with regard to the environmental health consequences of its disposal of
hazardous waste from the pesticide factory. Internal documents of the
corporation obtained through the New York district court include
bioassay reports of 100 per cent fish mortality in samples of ground
water from in and around the factory at five to 10 times dilution.
Through persistent efforts under the Right to Information Act, one of
the Bhopal padyatris recently obtained copies of quarterly monitoring
reports of ground water quality from the State Pollution Control Board.
These reports show that chemicals known to cause damage to brain,
lungs, liver and kidneys and give rise to cancers and birth defects are
present in high concentrations in the water of the local community hand
pumps. Sadly, the ICMR has not found it fit to initiate research on the
health impact of the contamination of ground water that continues to be
routinely used by 25, 000 people.
Reason for agitation
The big reason why the victims of Bhopal continue to agitate for
generation and publication of health information against its deliberate
denial by the Indian government and the number one chemical corporation
of the world is that such information is essential for their health and
lives. In the absence of research, providing temporary symptomatic
relief has been the mainstay of medical care ever since the morning of
the disaster. The indiscriminate prescription of steroids, antibiotics
and psychotropic drugs is compounding the damage caused by the gas
exposure.
Despite spending over Rs. 300 crore from the public exchequer and
establishing more hospital beds per 1,000 population in Bhopal than in
the U.S. or Europe, the failure of the government’s system of
healthcare to offer sustained relief has led to a proliferating
business for private doctors and nursing homes. In the severely
affected areas, most of the meagre compensation has gone to private
doctors, nearly 70 per cent of who are not even professionally
qualified. Yet they constitute the majority of the medical care
providers.
In addition to knowing about and treating their poison-ravaged bodies,
the people in Bhopal need research to know what lies in store for the
children born to gas-affected and contamination-affected parents. While
the Bhopalis have been clamouring for this information for 23 years,
the ICMR has not exactly covered itself in glory in this respect. From
1988 to 1991, ICMR’s research team in Bhopal reported that children of
gas-exposed parents had delayed physical and mental development and
lower values for anthropometric parameters such as height and mid-arm
circumference compared to children born to unexposed parents. Despite
the positive and significant findings regarding teratogenic effect of
the toxic exposure, and desperate requests from the Principal
Investigator that the study be continued till the children attain
puberty, it was wound up abruptly in June 1991 following directions
from the ICMR headquarters.
The specially empowered commission for long-term research and
rehabilitation that the Bhopal padyatris are asking for is long
overdue. Let us hope that the government finally summons the political
will to stop the medical disaster in Bhopal by setting up such a
commission.
http://www.thehindu.com/2008/04/22/stories/2008042255610900.htm
Copyright
© 2008, The Hindu.