Pregnant
woman jumps to her death after doctors refused C-section requests to ease her
agony
Ma Rongrong’s labour pains were unbearable. For hours she
had begged for a C-section to ease her agony. After multiple requests were
refused, she jumped five floors from a hospital window in northern China to her
death.
Ma’s family and her doctors have blamed each other for
denying her the surgery that could have eased her suffering.
The tragedy has attracted intense attention in China, with
many wondering how Ma could be denied such a common procedure.
There is no clear answer, but the incident has sparked a
national discussion on everything from the high cost of health care and patients’
rights to the dangers of traditional Chinese family values.
The conversation reached fever pitch this week after leaked
security footage showing Ma on her knees in front of her family in a hospital
corridor went viral.
In response to the uproar, the official People’s Daily said
in an editorial that no matter who is ultimately to blame, the incident should
serve as a national wake-up call.
“It is necessary to pay more attention to pregnant women’s
feelings, and pay greater respect to their autonomy,” it said.
“We need to have more empathetic understanding and care for
them. We cannot only think about policies and interests.”
– Trading blame –
The hospital and Ma’s family have traded blame for refusing
her request for a Caesarean, presumably provoking her to kill herself rather
than continue suffering through an excruciating labour.
The hospital has said it recommended Ma undergo the
procedure, but that she and her husband insisted on natural birth in the belief
it was better for the child.
As evidence, the hospital posted Ma’s surgery log on its
official social media account, showing the family had denied her requests.
Ma had signed an authorisation granting her husband the
right to make medical decisions on her behalf, it said, adding the hospital,
therefore “had no right to change the delivery method without (his) consent”.
But Ma’s husband, Yan Zhuangzhuang, told the Beijing Youth
Daily that he had agreed to his wife’s surgery: it was the doctor who said it
was unnecessary.
Under Chinese law, the decision should have been made by the
person herself, according to Feng Lihua, an expert on medical disputes at
Beijing’s Zhongdun Law Firm.
“It cannot be authorised by other people,” he told AFP.
– Online uproar –
The controversy has been hotly discussed for days, and by
the end of the week the hashtag “Yulin pregnant woman jumps to death” was the
third highest trending topic on the Twitter-like Weibo.
The incident is under police investigation, but the question
for many is why Ma was not allowed to choose her own course of care.
Some commenters argued the family was not able or willing to
pay for the surgery — a common problem in a country where anything other than
the most basic medical care can be out of reach for the average person.
Others have wondered whether government policy was at least
partly to blame for Ma’s death.
China has long kept a tight rein on women’s reproductive
rights, sometimes using force.
After decades of promoting a strict “one-child” policy to
limit its booming population, China has reversed course, pushing women to have
two children in hopes of rejuvenating the country’s greying labour force.
While C-sections are favoured in China as a less painful
option, the government has pressured hospitals to reduce the Caesarean rate
which is among the world’s highest.
“The hospital wants to limit C-sections and the families
don’t want to spend money,” said one commenter, airing a view that was widely
expressed on social media.
“This type of system and this type of family produced this
type of tragedy.”
The government has also pushed a return to more traditional,
Confucian values that privilege the family over the individual.
What that means for childbirth is that husbands and their
mothers — not women themselves — are more likely to call the shots.
“Why can’t the hospital carry out a C-section upon her
request?” wrote one commenter on Weibo.
“Simply because her family does n
ot agree? What kind of rule is this?”
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