Showing posts with label domestic violence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label domestic violence. Show all posts

Friday, December 9, 2022

Day 14: Domestic violence and access to justice: Regional perspectives

On the 14th day of the 2022 Prajnya 16 Days Campaign Against Gender violence, we organised the "Domestic violence and access to justice: regional perspectives" panel discussion. South Asian states have passed laws on domestic violence but survivors still struggle to access justice. This panel brought together the experiences of Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and India. Watch a saved copy of the recording here.


Panelists: Sara Hossein, Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust; Saba Shaikh, Dastak, Pakistan; Ermiza Tegal, lawyer, Sri Lanka; Shazia Choudhry, Oxford University and Philippa Williams, Queen Mary University of London. The session was facilitated by Suneeta Dhar.

This panel is part of the project Surviving Violence: Everyday resilience and gender justice in rural-urban India funded by the British Academy Heritage Dignity and Violence Programme HDV190009. Research partners: Queen Mary University of London, Chaitanya-The Policy Consultancy, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Institute of Development Studies Kolkata, Nari Samata Manch and University of Oxford.


"It almost seems like the COVID  pandemic underscored the structural nature of gender inequalities within and across countries, and it essentially brought to light the invisible, unrecognised pandemic of gender-based violence, domestic violence and intimate partner violence. I hate the word shadow-pandemic; I think that domestic violence is not a shadow pandemic. That it was given visibility during this time by the UN and other agencies speaks of how little attention this issue has got over time", Dr. Suneeta Dhar said, as she opened the session.


Shazia Choudhry, Oxford University and Philippa Williams, Queen Mary University of London:


  • "PWDVA (2005) encompasses the broader definition of violence; it is not just about physical violence, but also about emotional, psychological, financial and sexual violence as well."
  • "There were also problematic attitudes in terms of lawyers, unfortunately. Survivors' opinions about lawyers were actually mixed. In a few cases, survivors found their lawyers to be helpful, didn't charge them high fees and followed up their cases. Survivors who accessed their lawyers through NGOs had fairly positive feedback about their lawyers."
  • "There are huge barriers to accessing formal justice. And, as a result, women, therefore, are more likely to turn to the informal mechanisms that actually exist. And, the most commonly accessible and prominent body was the panchayat."



Sara Hossein, Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust

  • "I think some of the crucial points about our (Bangladesh's) framework is that although we have this strong, constitutional mandate for equality, we, of course, know that, there lives, alongside, a lot of very contradictory, continuing, persistent discrimination in terms of the legislation, and that we have a legislative framework which inhabits three different centuries."
  • "One of the really challenging limits of our legislation, in addition to the exclusions already mentioned about people with disabilities and sexual minorities is the exclusion of divorced women from the ambit of the protection of the domestic violence law."
  • "While there is an increased awareness of domestic violence as a wrong, for which remedies are available, there is very little awareness of what those remedies are and very little awareness of where you can go to access services for remedies and protection."

Saba Shaikh, Dastak, Pakistan:
  • "Mostly, women in Pakistan resolve issues by going to the locals or elders in the community. If, for example, that doesn't work out, then they will reach out to relatives or friends within the community who can possibly link them to other possible options."
  • "Women's rights of freedom and choice and movement are severely restricted in the name of modesty or protection and they consider to epitomize honour and therefore any sort of measure that they take for their rights seems like they are bringing dishonour to the family."
  • "Oftentimes there are judicial pronouncements which reflect the negative bias; we have had a lot of cases and judgements where you see the judges are using their own sort of subjective morality instead of really looking at the law."

Ermiza Tegal, lawyer, Sri Lanka
  • "During the COVID pandemic, for example, and the lockdown restrictions, we only noticed that advisory services was what was possible. And then, all of the actual services required, even to come out of the house, to come out of your environment of abuse or environmental violence was not possible for women."
  • "Sri Lanka also needs to be considered in its socio-political context of violence and impunity so there's a long history of violence, even today, with the Prevention of Terrorism Act being used against protestors in Sri Lanka."
  • "Laws are really imperfect tools because they are products of our socio-political systems and we recognise this when we work with it. The Domestic Violence Act sits amongst laws that are very unfair on people, and they don't recognise the experiences of women, like cyber violence, care work is not recognised, abortion is an issue that still needs to be addressed, marital rape is explicitly recognised."

About the Speakers:
1. Sara Hossain is a Senior Advocate at the Supreme Court of Bangladesh, practicing in the areas of constitutional, corporate and family law. She is a partner at the law firm of Dr. Kamal Hossain
and Associates, and also serves pro bono as the Honorary Executive Director of the Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust (BLAST). She is currently a Professor of Practice at SOAS, University of London. She is a Bencher of the Middle Temple. Sara was educated at Wadham College, Oxford (1988), and called to the Bar from Middle Temple (1989), then enrolled in the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh (1992) and the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court (2008). She has been involved in landmark cases and campaigns on gender equality (‘fatwa’ violence discriminatory rape laws,sexual harassment), prohibition of corporal punishment in schools, protection against torture and freedom of expression. Sara has received awards for her work from the Lawyers’ Committee for Human Rights, the US State Department (Women of Courage), ‘Ananya’ magazine (Top Ten), and was selected as a World Economic Forum Fellow and an Asia 21 Fellow.

2. Saba Shaikh is trained as a lawyer and also holds a degree in public policy. She works as a human rights advocate with over 14 years of experience in implementing and improving response strategies for those facing abuse, gender based violence or denial of their fundamental rights through provision of legal aid, training and community awareness. She is currently the Executive Director of Dastak Charitable Trust, an access to justice center for women and children that, among other programs, runs the only private shelter in the country for women and girls at extreme risk of violence. Saba has executed projects for a range of international organizations including Oxfam, Open Society Foundations, DFID, KIOS Foundation, and USAID among others. Saba is an Atlantic Council Emerging Leaders of Pakistan (ELP) Fellow 2012, Asia Society (India Pakistan Young Leaders Initiative) Fellow 2013 and US State IVLP Fellow 2019.

3. Suneeta Dhar is a Gender and Development Specialist with over four decades of experience on advancing women’s human rights. She has worked with community based civil society organizations as well as with international organizations. She is an external member of a few Internal Committees on Sexual Harassment of government and civil society organizations. Suneeta holds a Master’s degree in Social Work from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai, and has been a recipient of the Fulbright and Advocacy Institute Fellowships for Development Practitioners. She has co-authored research studies, training manuals, and papers on women’s safety, gender and SDGs, transformative governance and women’s rights. Suneeta was recognized by Apolitical’s 100 Most Influential People in Gender Policy in 2021.

4. Philippa Williams is research and teaching intersects political, economic and development geography, with a focus on everyday political life in India and its transnational community. More specifically, she interested in questions concerning how the state is experienced, how citizenship is articulated and how marginality, particularly in the context of violence/nonviolence is lived and increasingly how digital technology is mediating everyday political life in India. In the UK research she has also explored the lived implications of the Indian emigration state and the UK government’s hostile immigration policy for recent South Asian migrants.She is Primary Investigator on two live projects:1) Social media and everyday life in India with Lipika Kamra examines how WhatsApp is shaping everyday political life from the family to political party and the nation. The initial phase of this research was funded by WhatsApp. We are now embarking on a second phase focused on lived experiences of digital privacy in India.

5. Shazia Choudhry is Professor of Law and the Jeffrey Hackney Tutorial Fellow in Law at Wadham. She is also an Academic Bencher and Associate Academic Fellow at the Inner Temple.Her research is focused on gender, human rights and violence against women and seeks to examine various dimensions of these areas from an interdisciplinary and feminist perspective. In doing so she employs doctrinal, theoretical and empirical methods. Her scholarship sits at the interface of criminal law, human rights law and family law.She has published three books. 

6. Ermiza Tegal has a Masters in Law from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London. She has 15 years of litigating in public law, fundamental rights, land, labour and family law. She has served as a legal expert on State advisory committees on law reform. Her recent advocacy and research work involves law reform relating to family law, domestic violence, protection for victims of torture, counter terrorism and human rights, gender based violence and a people’s land policy. She is a founder member of Muslim Personal Law Reform Action Group advocating muslim family law reforms. She is also currently a visiting fellow with the Harvard Law School Program on Law and Society in the Muslim World and a member of the Feminist Collective on Economic Justice in Sri Lanka.

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Day 12: Ensuring Access to Reproductive Choice: A Workshop || @drumaram_ram @Archytypes @swarraj @sudaroliacr @Shakthi_2016

Prepared with notes from Dr. S. Shakthi.

On the 12th day of the 2022 Prajnya 16 Days Campaign Against Gender Violence, we organised an interactive panel discussion, where Dr. Uma Ram, Dr. Prabha Swaminathan, Dr. Jaishree Gajaraj and Archanaa Sekar discussed issues related to sexual and reproductive health rights from the point of view of health care providers. In partnership with ATNRCOG and IRC India South, the 3-hour long event, Ensuring Access to Reproductive Choice: A Workshop" was conducted at Savera Hotel, Chennai.

The topics addressed in the workshop were Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR), Abortion, Domestic Violence and Intimate Partner Violence. The discussions aimed at focussing on how professionals in the medical field would respond to scenarios on the aforementioned themes. Dr. Uma Ram and Dr. Jaishree Gajaraj opened the workshop by discussing abortion, particularly on how to handle cases that may make the role of the doctor complicated, like cases involving minors, which may be filed under POSCO. They supplemented their discussion with several concrete examples of cases they have witnessed. The doctors, during the workshop, acknowledged that regardless of one's personal belief on topics like SRHR and abortion, it is essential for a medical professional to follow the law. The law, here, explicitly states that abortion is a right, which was emphasised throughout the discussion.


In the next hour, Archanaa Seker looked into the theme of access to contraception. She took the audience through an understanding of the ground reality of accessing contraception - in terms of the material, cultural and economic barriers. She mentioned that it is essential to shift the focus to not just look at individuals dealing with the possibility of getting pregnant, but to also look into what people's sexual practices are, what their reproductive choices are and what the overarching conditions for the same may be. The availability of Emergency Contraceptive Pills (ECPs) was also discussed. This discussion was insightful for doctors as it provided them with an understanding of what happens on-ground.


Additionally, during the course of the session, Dr. Swarna Rajagopalan (Prajnya) provided the audience with an understanding of what domestic violence is - that it goes beyond physical and sexual violence, and can also be economic and emotional violence. Dr. Prabha Swaminathan accompanied this conversation with her insights on how the medical fraternity must respond when a patient who has faced domestic violence approaches you, and reflected on the theme through her experiences as an OBGYN. The speakers also touched upon the need to be mindful of the language that is used while communicating with victims-survivors of domestic violence.


In the last hour, role plays were conducted by seven doctors:

1. A doctor and patient - A case of an unmarried woman wanting an abortion.

2. A doctor and patient - A case of a woman who comes in with two children (one of them is less than a year old), and she is pregnant again. She does not want another child, and does not want her family to know that she is getting an abortion.

3. A doctor, a patient and a husband who is abusive - Dealing with domestic violence, especially when the abuser might be in the same room as the patient.





The role plays were done in two segments where one version showed how the doctors must not respond, and all the things that must not be said/done. The other version looked into how the doctors must respond, and the importance of ensuring that their actions are empathetic and supportive.

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Day 11: Shutdowns and Domestic Violence Help-Seeking: A research symposium

 

On December 5, 2022, Rajaram Research Fellow, Arshie Showkat Qureshi presented her ongoing work on the impact of successive shutdowns on the ability of Kashmiri women to access help when they experienced violence. Sarala Emmanuel, activist and researcher, from Batticaloa, Sri Lanka brought to the discussion perspectives from a region that had also experienced conflict over a long period. 





Saturday, December 3, 2022

Day 8: Stand in Solidarity or Sit in Silence! Poetry Reading

Images  by: Selvaraj 


On the 8th day of the 2022 Prajnya 16 Days Campaign Against Gender Violence, we partnered with Mockingbirds and InKo Centre and organised a poetry reading. This year, we had Srilata K, Kutti Revathi, Aaliyah Banu, Manushi Bharathi and Amrin Khalil reading their poetry.



The poetry reading covered a wide range of themes like body politics, domestic violence, religious identities and rights of transgender persons, to name a few. A few of the poets were also of the firm view that their work does fundamentally stay rooted in the idea that "personal is political".


You see, Women must fight to be alive
The world isn't a nice place
For a woman, even the air she breathes is luxury
Something that is given to her
Something she will be held accountable for” 
- excerpt from Aaliyah's work, "The Angry Poem"

Kutti Revathi, in her conversation with Saradha U, for the TNM piece noted that, the performers provided the audience with a holistic perspective on the voices of women, with each poetry providing a different perspective, and acknowledging that the efforts made by the poets to put their voices out there is not easy (Saradha, 2022, as cited in The News Minute, 2022)


You may read the elaborate coverage of our event by Saradha U for The News Minute here.

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Day 4: Surviving Violence: Everyday Resilience and Gender Justice Webinar

On the 4th day of the 2022 Prajnya 16 Days Campaign Against Gender violence, the 'Surviving Violence: Everyday Resilience and Gender Justice' webinar brought together the findings of a three-state research project on help-seeking experiences of domestic violence victim-survivors. The presentations were made by Girija Godbole, IIT Bombay and Preeti Karmarkar, Nari Samata Manch on Maharashtra; RNandini Ghosh, Supurna Banerjee (Institute of Development Studies Kolkata) on West Bengal; and Swarna Rajagopalan (Chaitanya) on Tamil Nadu. Shakthi S. (Prajnya) facilitated the event. You may find a saved copy of the recording here. 

This panel is part of the research project Surviving Violence: Everyday resilience and gender justice in rural-urban India funded by the British Academy Heritage Dignity and Violence Programme HDV190009. Research partners: Queen Mary University of London, Chaitanya-The Policy Consultancy, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Institute of Development Studies Kolkata, Nari Samiti Manch and University of Oxford.


Findings from Maharashtra: Girija Godbole (IIT Bombay), Preeti Karmarkar (Nari Samata Manch).

  • "When we spoke to the survivors, almost 80% of them said that they had suffered all types of violence such as physical, sexual, emotional, verbal and economic. The most common reasons were liquor addiction and/or extramarital affairs of the husband, coupled with suspicion about the wife by the husband."
  • "Most survivors said that the first persons they spoke to were typically their parents. For informal mediation, the first attempt is to organise a family meeting to discuss and resolve the issues."
  • "In the rural sides, where we have tribal groups, we also saw that two survivors approached the tribal council in their villages. In one case, the survivor consulted the tribal council in her village, but she wasn't happy with the verdict. So, she approached the court. And, the tribal council wasn't very happy about the situation, that she went out of the village. And they put a lot of pressure on her to withdraw the case. She decided to go to a higher level of the tribal council, which is the circle council. There was one member there who was sensible and sensitive and took up her cause, and he tried settling the case. Then, she withdrew the case from the court, and she was satisfied with the verdict."
  • "We asked them (survivors), what according to them is domestic violence?...their definition of domestic violence is very well consistent with the definition as given in PWDVA, 2005, that is, they recognise non-physical forms of violence also."
  • "One very important suggestion, that came from a lawyer that we interviewed is that, PWDVA matters should be allowed in the family court. At present, they are heard by the Judicial Magistrate First Class."


Findings from Tamil Nadu: Dr. Swarna Rajagopalan (Chaitanya)

  • "What emerges from the stories that we primarily heard from survivors but also from community members and service providers in the state, formal and informal, is really that, women are stuck. They are hemmed in by patriarchy, socio-economic inequities and escape hatches and drawbridges and support services that they do not know about, that they cannot access and that, sometimes, simply don't work. But still, the fact that 61 of them sat through the interview and told us their stories makes this also a story of resilience."
  • "If the first question of intersectionality is, 'does this form of identity affect the experience of violence, of help-seeking, of access to justice', then the answers in our data, in Tamil Nadu, are not pronounced enough to headline the research"
  • "We wanted to know how people coped/lived with violence and most women felt safest in their natal home, and most unsafe in their marital home."


Findings from West Bengal: Dr. Nandini Ghosh, Dr. Supurna Banerjee (Institute of Development Studies Kolkata)

  • "We have not found any significant caste differences, but echoing the other two teams, what we have found is that there is never a single form of violence happening. What happens is that there are multiple kinds of violence. The verbal and physical are often taken for granted."
  • "Legal aid, which is free, has largely been ineffective. So there has been lack of financial and infrastructural support from the state, and this is what the lawyers tell us. Most of the survivors too reiterated this."
  • "While there are laws and institutions to protect survivors of domestic violence, there is an entire gamut, an entire structure (the informal help-seeking) that operates outside of this." 
  • "It was evident that domestic violence was embedded in the social hierarchies of power, of dominant heteronormative, caste, class, and gender interests."


About the Speakers:
1. Supurna Banerjee is faculty in Institute of Development Studies Kolkata (IDSK). She researches labour, gender, violence, migration and intersectionality. Her monograph Activism and Agency in India: nurturing Resistance in Tea Plantations was published in 2017. She has published in various peer reviewed journals such as Gender, Work and Organisation, Oral History and JSAD. She has co-authored Limits of Bargaining: Capital, Labour and the State in India Violent Domestic: 𝙇𝙖𝙬, 𝙞𝙩𝙨 𝙋𝙧𝙖𝙘𝙩𝙞𝙘𝙚, 𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙎𝙩𝙧𝙖𝙩𝙚𝙜𝙞𝙚𝙨 𝙤𝙛 𝙎𝙪𝙧𝙫𝙞𝙫𝙖𝙡.

2. Nandini Ghosh is Assistant Professor, Institute of devlelopment studies, Kolkata, PhD in Social Sciences, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, 2008. Books Published - Impaired Bodies, Gendered Lives: Everyday Realities of Disabled Women, New Delhi: Primus Publishers, 2016 Books Edited, Caste and Gender in Contemporary India: Power, Privilege and Politics, (Jointly with Supurna Banerjee), New Delhi: Routledge, 2019 Interrogating Disability in India: Theory and Practice, Springer, 2016 Pratyaha: Everyday Lifeworld: Dilemmas, Negotiations and Conflicts, (Jointly with Prasanta Ray), New Delhi: Primus, 2016., Hyderabad.

3. Preeti Karmarkar, Managing Trustee at Nari Samata Manch, she is trained as a Social Scientist and Gender expert, Preeti is associated with Nari Samata Manch since 1998. She has 22 years of experience in social development field in the areas of grassroot mobilization, project development and Management, M&E, policy as well as investigative research and NGO management with national and international exposure. She is an experienced gender trainer and provide consultation for gender integration in programme. She also provides training/consultation for implementation of Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013 and work as external members for renowned organizations. Earlier she has worked at Women’s Studies Centre (University of Pune), YASHADA and BAIF Development Research Foundation

4. Girija Godbole, Ghod Water Fund Lead at The Nature Conservancy and researched over areas of Anthropology, Gender, Natural Resource Management, Communication and uptake and she did her PhD at University of Cambridge, thesis title: “Selling land is the beginning of the end for us”: Understanding rural people’s perspectives on the impacts of increasing land sale in western Maharashtra, India, her publication are Godbole, G. (2014) ‘Revealing and concealing: ethical dilemmas of manoeuvring identity in the field’ in Lunn, J. (Ed.) Fieldwork in the Global South: Ethical Challenges and Dilemmas Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge pp: 85-95, Godbole G. (2006) Mendha (Lekha): A case study on self rule for sustainable natural resource management in Stakeholder Participation in Environmental Governance published by LEAD India, Godbole G. (2006) Building bridges for greener future: Analyzing Maharashtra State Participatory Forest Management Network in Insights from the field: studies in Participatory Forest Management in India, Winrock International India, Godbole G. & Vira B. (March 2004). Towards an alternative politics: People’s movements join the electoral process. InfoChange News & Features, India, Godbole G. (April 2003) Two women & a flying squad, InfoChange News & Features, India, Godbole G. (January, 2003) Free meals make them dependent, so should they go back to eating grass? InfoChange News & Features, India,Godbole G. (2002) Working paper on ‘Joint forest Management and Gender in India’ for Engendering Eden Project of the UK government


Saturday, November 27, 2021

Day 2: Gender Violence Sensitisation for Home Nurses


On the 2nd day of the 2021 Prajnya 16 Days Campaign Against Gender Violence, Prajnya offered a training session on domestic violence and workplace sexual harrassment for home nursing trainees in partnership with the Association for Non-traditional Employment for Women (ANEW). 



The 3-hour session was administered by Sudaroli Ramaswamy of Prajnya. In the first part of the session, she spoke about the different kinds of gender-based violence and how they can sometimes be invisible. She then spoke about sexual harrassment at the workplace, and how these situations can be remedied. Sudaroli also touched upon identifying domestic violence as home nurses, bystander intervention and rapport building. She concluded the session by speaking about some of the protocols social workers and counsellors follow in cases of domestic violence and workplace sexual harrassment cases.

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Day 10: சுற்றத்தில் நோய், இல்லத்தில் வன்முறை: A Discussion on Domestic Violence during the Pandemic

We invited service providers from all the districts of Tamil Nadu to an afternoon of sharing and discussion around the increased frequency of domestic violence and other forms of gender-based violence during the pandemic lockdown. 

Thirty-three districts were represented by 24 NGOs, some of whom worked primarily in the area of domestic violence support services and others whose work brought them into contact with survivors whom they went on to help. Prior to the meeting, NGOs filled out a short survey. We will compile those findings and notes from this discussion into a report before Pongal 2021. 

Some common experiences and themes that were mentioned in the presentations:

  • All types of violence became more common during the lockdown. Apart from domestic violence, participants mentioned:
    • Child Marriage
    • Forced Marriage
    • Child Sexual Abuse, often by old people.
  • There were also caste-related consequences: One NGO representative narrated the story of a young man, about to marry out of his caste before COVID, who married according to his family's wishes in order to have their support during the pandemic. 
  • Economic distress led to women being unable to repay microcredit loans. This led to arguments and violence.
  • Men being at home all day increased the workload at home and also led to friction over money and violence.
  • Social workers could not travel to check on clients who were known to experience domestic violence, and victims could not travel to seek help. In the constant presence of abusers, phone calls were also not an option.
  • Victims were unable to reach shelter homes because COVID tests were required. One NGO mentioned that women who came to the shelter during COVID were unusually unwilling to go back home.
  • Alcohol consumption by men sitting idle was related to increased domestic violence. One NGO representative said, "We could write an episode on before and after TASMAC. After the opening of TASMAC, the men started hitting their wives to ask for money to buy liquor."

This summary barely captures the richness of the discussions. There was great interest in follow-up activity and suggestions included:
  • Consultations over a longer duration on this topic.
  • Camps to help women register domestic violence cases.
  • A collective voice to raise these issues and also to access data.
  • Capacity-building for NGOs who may not specialise in, but need information about gender-based violence and laws.
We were overwhelmed by the response and enthusiastic engagement by our partners but dismayed that some of them had to struggle with connectivity issues and could not make their presentations. In this information age, we were reminded that the digital divide has not been bridged at all. 

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Day 9: Domestic Violence Workshop



On the 9th day of the 2018 Prajnya 16 Days Campaign against Gender Violence, we scheduled a workshop on Domestic Violence. The workshop was conducted at our office in partnership with Roshni, our partner organisation who work with self-help group women. Twenty five self-help group women from Roshni participated in the workshop. 

The workshop was designed in an interactive mode with activities and films to talk about what is all about domestic; what does the domestic abuse mean; what are the myths related to the domestic abuse; the cycle of violence; how does it impact the women and children in different ways; legal framework to combat domestic abuse; how to approach the police and how can the FIR be filed; what is the importance of bystander intervention and what steps the bystander can take to protect the women in distress.

It was really an interactive session where women mostly related the incidents happened in and around their lives. At some point of the workshop, they were split into pairs and allowed to choose a chit which had commonly believed statements around domestic abuse like "Jealousy is the sign of love', "Smashing things is not abusive, it is just venting" etc. And the groups opened up the discussion around the statement they got.



Also, various short films were shown on types of domestic violence, how it impacts children, and how the bystander could intervene and a discussion was built around the movies.

The workshop was closed with the distribution of the flyer 'Call For Help'. The subject of the workshop was very serious but then it was built with the laughter and fun by the women. There were few women who came up and asked for the help and was referred to the self providers. Their energy still remains in our office space to keep us in momentum to work tirelessly towards ending all violence against women.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Report: Doctor's Panel at SRMC




If you are a gynecologist at a public or private hospital, what should you know about examining a survivor of sexual assault? 


If you are a physician in the emergency ward of a hospital, how do you recognize and intervene in cases of domestic violence?


If you are a medical student, what should you know about your curriculum regarding the provision of gender-sensitive medical care?


If you are an intern confronted with your first set of patients, how should you handle cases of abuse?


If you are a nurse or a paramedic or any other first responder, how can you respond sensitively?



These are critical questions about the recognition, screening and intervention to gender-based violence that health systems and the people who populate them often do not ask. An insular approach that treats surface wounds without addressing the underlying causes is the norm and as Dr.Rajani Jagtap puts it, it starts with a bruise and ends in death, with no one being the wiser. 


On Thursday, 27th November, Prajnya kick started this years spotlight events on gender violence and  public health with a Doctor's Panel at Sri Ramachandra University that looked at all the above questions and shed light on the protocols and guidelines that exist to guide medical professionals in screening and responding to gender violence as well as discussing the mandated roles medical professionals have to play in terms of law and policy.




 


The panel began with a presentation by Anuradha Kapoor of Swayam who made the case for getting gender violence in all its forms on the public health agenda. She analysed NCRB records and quoted statistics to indicate that not only are a disproportionate number of women facing violence in this country, but also that it has an enormous impact on their physical, psycho-social and reproductive health. She identified the health system as one of the weakest links in the service provider chain, where women are looked at as patients and injuries are treated without dealing with the violence behind it. While discussing the role of health providers, she stressed on the following:



  • Creating a safe and secure environment for the survivor to access help and consider options.
  • Ensuring privacy and confidentiality to elicit information without fear of reprisals or other consequences.
  • Probing the causes behind injuries.
  • Being sensitive and not engaging in further victimization.
  • While there is a greater emphasis on sexual assault, domestic violence often goes unrecognized. Health providers need to be aware of what the law mandates and understand their roles.
  • Health providers should be in touch with local service providers and have referral mechanisms in place to provide the survivor with the help (legal services, shelters etc) she needs.
  • Recording and reporting all information clearly. This is also important from the angle of evidence documentation.
  • Going beyond response mechanisms and engaging in prevention and support activities.

Sangeeta Rege, Senior Researcher from CEHAT spoke next about the lacunae in implementing standardised protocols for responding to domestic and sexual violence. She began by identifying the lack of serious policy directives in India that recognize violence as a legitimate public health issue. She stated that The National Health Policy of 2002 made no mention of violence and it wasn't until 2008 that the planning commission report recognized violence against women as a health impediment. This has serious implications in terms of delivering a sustained and integrated health care model  Some of the barriers to both providing and accessing quality health care for those affected by violence that have existed so far that she pinpointed include:
  • The lack of standardised protocols for provision of treatment.
  • The fact that violence related injuries are not considered medico-legal emergencies and subsequent lack of 'emergency' care.
  • The prevalence of a victim-blaming attitude and engendering secondary cycles of victimization
  • The demand for mandatory police requisition that hinders access to immediate health care
  • The pervasiveness of insensitive and discriminatory medical practices such as the 2-finger rape test, hymen tests, comments on build and vaginal/anal laxity
  • The medical and therapeutic aspects of care are neglected.
However both the Domestic Violence Act of 2005 and the Amended Criminal Law of  2013 which looks at sexual violence including rape, have made it mandatory for private and public hospitals to respond and it's now important to ensure implementation and compliance. 

Expanding on a public health approach to gender-based violence, the role of Primary Health Centres in screening, awareness and referrals, secondary health centres in establishing hospital-based crisis centres and  tertiary centres in incorporating gender into medical education and the need to overhaul curriculum was discussed.

Ms.Rege also outlined  a health sector model for sexual assault that comprises of:
  • Getting informed consent from the survivor for all procedures to be carried out.
  • Implementing a uniform gender sensitive protocol which does away with insensitive practices such as the two-finger test.
  • Maintaining chain of custody for medico-legal evidence is critical.
  • Standardised treatment guidelines should be followed including screening for STIs, pregnancy tests and provision of emergency contraception within 48-72 hours.
  • Providing psychological and social support. Serve as interface with police and other services.
For More Information: 

The Government of India issued  Guidelines for Medico-Legal Care for Survivors/Victims of Sexual Violence has a comprehensive list of protocols for all health workers.


Dr.Rajani Jagtap, Medical Officer at Rajawadi Hospital Mumbai spoke next about the Dilaasa Crisis Centre, a hospital-based screening and response centre for violence against women. The Dilaasa Model comprises of comprehensive training for doctors and other health professionals to repond to VAW and identifies signs and symptoms that are suggestive of Domestic Violence for every department of the hospital. An integrated approach is also provided in terms of outlining a standard proforma and treatment protocols. The Crisis Intervention Department receives referrals from the OPD, IPD and Emergency wards and is staffed with trained counsellors. An interesting aspect of the Dilaasa model is the creation of temporary shelters within the ward which gives women the option of being admitted for 24-72 hours to reflect on the choices available to them. This removes the consequences attached to approaching to other service providers and creates a safe haven for women affected by violence.
Dr.Jagtap shared her experiences of being a part of a hospital-based crisis center and stressed on the importance of screening all patients for potential signs of abuse. She elaborated on the need to go beyond the symptoms and explore possible reasons for them. Even something as simple as anemia could have deeper implications in an abusive household and doctors need to probe for these connections she said. The necessity of recording and documenting all instances of violence and its evidentiary value was also emphasized. 

Following the presentations, a serious discussion ensued about the barriers to providing hospital-based care in instances of domestic and sexual violence including the safety of health professionals intervening in these cases. Moving forward, further engagement with the issue via training and capacity building was suggested. 


About the Resource Persons:



Anuradha Kapoor is the Founder Director and Managing Trustee of Swayam, a feminist women’s rights organisation addressing the inequalities and violence that women face in our country. She was actively involved in the advocacy that resulted in the passing of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, and has since been working on ensuring its effective implementation both at the State and National levels. She has also been a part of the National Consultations on Sexual Assault laws and Marital Property Rights andminitiated the setting up of AMAN Global Voices for Peace in the Home, an international network of organisations working on Domestic Violence.

Sangeeta Rege is a Senior Research Officer working with CEHAT. She has a Masters degree in Social Work and has been  involved in developing interventions , conducting  training  and carrying out  researcher on the issue of Violence Against Women and role of the health sector, for the past 13 years.  She has published several papers in this regard and has also co- edited a book  recently titled ‘Feminist Counselling and Domestic Violence in India’ with Padma Deosthali and Padma Prakash.

Dr. Rajani Jagtap is a doctor practicing at Rajawadi Municipal Hospital in Mumbai. She is a Medical Officer and oversees the Dilaasa centre, the first-hospital based crisis centre responding to Violence Against Women in India. In association with CEHAT, Dr.Rajani also trains doctors and other health care providers in screening and responding to gender violence sensitively. 


Saturday, November 29, 2014

The Gender Violence -- Health System Interface: Practices, Guidelines and Protocols

A Report by Ranjitha Gunasekaran




The Gender Violence-Health Systems Interface: A Roundtable

As part of its 2014 16-Day Campaign Against Gender Violence, Prajnya, in association with Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES), held a roundtable discussion on November 28, 2014 in Chennai. The roundtable was aimed at highlighting the gender violence as a public health issue and the responsibility of health service providers in identifying, supporting and treating survivors of gender violence. The roundtable featured presentations by Anuradha Kapoor of Swayam, Kolkata, Sangeeta Rege of the Centre for Enquiry into Health and Allied Themes (CEHAT), Mumbai and Dr Rajani Jagtap of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC), Mumbai. Participants at the roundtable included mental health, medical and nursing professionals as well as journalists and activists. Each presentation was followed by a round of questions and sharing of expertise and experiences by the participants, many of whom looked for guidance on ways in which they could identify and support persons affected by gender violence within their realm of work. The vulnerability of women living with mental illness to violence, the physician’s role in identifying persons affected by violence and the lack of sensitive training provided to medical and nursing professionals in dealing with gender violence are some of the issues that came up for discussion. The out-dated notions describing the physical signs of sexual assault as in some medical textbooks in India were brought up and the effect of such misinformation on the quality of service provided to survivors of sexual violence was highlighted.

Anupama Srinivasan of Prajnya introduced the speakers of the day and started the roundtable with a presentation on the importance of seeing gender violence as a public health issue, while Dr Swarna Rajagopalan of Prajnya introduced the 16 Days Campaign which is in its sixth year. FES was represented by Arti Peter.

Violence against Women - A Public Health Issue: Challenges and Ways Forward
Anuradha Kapoor, Swayam, Kolkata




Kapoor began her presentation by introducing the work of Swayam, a feminist organisation that works with survivors of violence. Swayam supports the survivors through services that range from legal advice and guidance to counselling. According to Kapoor, Swayam aims to help a survivor of violence heal in a holistic way. A great deal of importance is given to mental health support and mental well-being. “We look at women as survivors who can move to become agents of change,” she said. Swayam also works to prevent gender violence through advocacy and community awareness programmes in rural and urban settings.

Kapoor stressed that violence against women was a public health issue. It is pervasive, affecting one in every three women across the world. Citing National Crime Records Bureau data from 2013, she said that 11, 700 women were either murdered or had committed suicide because of violence -- one woman every 45 minutes. Other than death or suicide, such violence can lead to maternal mortality, HIV/AIDS infections as the person lacks control over his or her sexuality, injuries or permanent disabilities. Most violence against women is not reported, she noted, stating that according to the National Family Health Survey 40 per cent of married Indian women faced domestic violence.

Violence against women also affects a woman’s reproductive health, causing her to lose her child, forcing her to seek unsafe abortions or resulting in various gynaecological problems. Further, there is the pervasive but invisible effect on the victim’s mental health -- anxiety, fear, stress, anger, low self-esteem, suspiciousness. Victims even suffer depression leading to suicide or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Sometimes, these issues manifest as psychosomatic illnesses or affect behaviour of the victim.

These issues demonstrate that violence against women is a public health issue. Health services are the first resort for a woman facing such violence. Doctors and hospitals offer a safe space for victims, a space that it is acceptable for her to approach. However, Kapoor, stated that health services were the weakest link of all the services available to victims of violence. A victim may hide the cause of injury because of shame, fear or lack of trust. Health professionals frequently treat and discharge such victims without making any attempt to find out how the injury occurred. If her injuries are not recorded, then she will have no evidence to support her case when she approaches the legal system, Kapoor pointed out. “The woman needs to be assured that what is happening to her is wrong. Reassurance is important. And referral to services is very important. Whether or not the information is used, it is important to give it to them. For which you need to provide a safe space and privacy and confidentiality,” Kapoor said. She added that protocols on dealing with sexual violence for healthcare providers had been released and that similar protocols were needed to deal with cases of domestic violence.

To help deal with the psychological effects of violence, Swayam provided its clients with mental health support. “The outcome of the legal aspects of her case is not in her hands but she can control herself -- her health and well-being,” Kapoor said. Swayam offered one-on-one as well as group counselling. The latter was very effective with providing the woman with a support system, a reassurance that she was not alone and scale of the problem of domestic violence. Swayam also organised anger management, parenting and self-empowerment workshops for its clients. Some of the clients had started their own theatre and music groups to raise awareness about domestic violence. They also ran a magazine.

Kapoor made the following suggestions to health service providers for dealing with persons who may be victims of gender violence.

  • Probe to find the underlying cause of the injury. Be sensitive, create confidentiality, and provide reassurance
  • Use Information and Communication Technologies to provide reassuring messages so that victims know that they are in a safe space where they can speak
  • Create a list of services that the patient can referred to and provide patients with these referrals -- to therapists, legal services, counsellors, protection officers -- whenever appropriate
  • Increase coordination between different medical departments
  • It is very important that the medical history is written in such a way that it is supportive to the victim in court
  • The Domestic Violence Act has a specific role for health professionals: They are service providers and cannot refuse medical assistance. The medical examiner’s report must be provided free of cost
  • It is important that health service providers are trained to screen patients and document their findings appropriately. They should be educated on their roles as described in various laws
  • Gender violence needs to be recognised as a public health issue

The discussion that followed Kapoor’s presentation raised the following issues:

  • The extent to which Swayam worked with the husbands of the women it helped came up, as did questions of family counselling. Kapoor stated that unless the woman asked for family counselling, Swayam did not provide such support. “We are a safe space for women. If we bring men into that space, it affects them,” she said. Though the organisation worked to promote awareness among boys and men in communities, she stressed that abusers were only brought into the conversation when the women asked that they be included. Some participants suggested, from their experience, that as leaving a marriage was very difficult for women, the couple be counselled and the husband warned against further abuse before they are reunited. Kapoor strongly disagreed with this approach, stating that an organisation could not be certain that the man will not continue to abuse the woman. The possibility of such abuse resulting in her death was too high a risk to late, she said, reiterating that Swayam believed in doing what the woman wanted to do, and supporting her decisions in every way possible. Rege added that we need to move beyond the sanctity of marriage. “It is important to provide an alternative perspective even if she wants to go back to the marriage, that there is life beyond marriage,” she said.
  • A social worker who worked with women in prisons asked for clarity on the law regarding women who have murdered their husbands after years of abuse. Kapoor pointed to the precedent provided by the case of Kiranjit Ahluwalia in the UK.
  • Medical professionals raised the importance of including the health effects of gender violence in the curricula. Training on how to identify victims of violence as well as how to respond to such situations would be welcome, they said.
  • The lack of media reporting of effects of violence on women was raised. Jaya Shreedhar, one of the participants and faculty at Asian College of Journalism, said that she wanted these issues included in the institute’s health journalism course. She also asked if a training curriculum was available for staff at fertility clinics, as the patients at such clinics were often subject to great pressure and stress.
  • A question was raised as to how abuse within a natal family was dealt with, specifically with regard to transgender individuals. Kapoor said that Swayam had worked with lesbian women in the past and in such cases, treated the natal family as the abuser.
  • A provocative question was raised on false complaints given by some women. Kapoor stated that laws should not be misused but asked why, when almost every law was misused, the handful of cases of false complaints were singled out.

Comprehensive healthcare response to Violence against Women: Lessons learnt
Sangeeta Rege, CEHAT, Mumbai




Rege outlined the efforts of CEHAT in Mumbai in working with health service providers. CEHAT worked largely in urban slums and with secondary and tertiary hospitals. Like Kapoor, Rege stressed that the health system was often the first point of contact for victims of gender violence. She also said that health systems, especially at the primary health centre level, were sites where early intervention and prevention of violence can be promoted. She emphasised the importance of proper medicolegal documentation as mandated by the law.

Rege’s presentation specifically dealt with the Dilaasa crisis centre initiated by CEHAT but functioning through the BMC in Mumbai. Dilaasa involved the training of health service providers and creation of protocols for the crisis intervention department. The project aims to use available resources, thus training nurses rather than doctors. Patients are referred to Dilaasa from the emergency, outpatient or inpatient departments, usually by a doctor or a nurse. The project, now 14 years old, has been replicated in the city. An external evaluation of the project took place in 2009. Rege said that 250 new patients came each year for crisis counselling. An additional 150 met counsellors but chose not to continue counselling. Based on studies of the Dilaasa model and emergency case records, Rege made the following observations and suggestions:
  • With 22 per cent of the women who survived abuse being in denial, it was important that the doctor developed the ability to identify persons who may be victims
  • With 47 per cent saying that they had experienced violence during pregnancy, it was important to create services that could be accessed by women during ante and post natal care
  • Health system and hospitals need to provide victims of gender violence with counselling services
  • The hospital could be a safe space for such women - under Dilaasa they can be admitted for three days and can use that time to think, and receive support while deciding their next moves. This was better than moving to a shelter, and provided the women with a sense of security as their hospitalisation would not raise suspicions at home
  • Violence Against Women is not recognised as public health issue and is not seen as fitting a biomedical model, according to Rege. This attitude is most evident in medical textbooks, some of which continue to perpetuate myths about sexual violence and feature a fixation on the hymen.
  • Further, there is no standard protocol on medico legal examinations in the country
  • Medical documentation can include insensitive language such as references to the nutritional status of a woman (as a well-built woman can be assumed to be able to resist assault). Based on this, the woman’s character becomes fair game in court. These archaic views have been challenged in PILs
  • As per changes in the law, a survivor can go to a hospital and report abuse, however there is little awareness about this and the therapeutic aspect of care in such circumstances has been neglected.
  • Medical examinations are often performed with little sensitivity.
  • There is limited recognition of non-peno-vaginal assault
  • Doctors are frequently ill-equipped to give a legal opinion and are often unable to separate their legal opinion from their personal opinion
  • The medical fraternity continues to entertain several misconceptions with regard to sexual assault. For instance the belief that rape always leaves signs of injuries or that hymenal status is critical to determine sexual assault. Worse, the elasticity of the vagina/anus is considered a determinant of assault. This is a new way to incorporating the two-finger test in the medical examination. Further, absence of medical evidence is seen as absence of rape. Rege stressed that the context of the assault and other variables need to be factored into the medical interpretation

Outlining a model of care to respond to sexual assault, Rege said that hospital-based crisis centres were needed because several young women access these centres within two years of being abused, there is voluntary reporting for treatment and a follow-up rate of more than 60 per cent as visiting a hospital is socially acceptable.

Health service providers had two key roles to play towards victims of gender violence. The first was therapeutic - to provide medical treatment and psychological support. The second was forensic and involved documentation. According to Rege, a comprehensive healthcare response to sexual assault would involve:
  • Seeking informed consent from survivor
  • A detailed, sensitive medical examination
  • Free medical support (by law, both private and public facilities must provide services)
  • Psychological support
  • Clear and fool proof chain of custody
  • Referral to other services

The following issues were raised in the discussion following Rege’s presentation:

  • Counselling services provided to families of survivors: Rege said that many are not interested in counselling services though they take the information. This is challenging because counselling becomes associated with the hospital. Further, there is the loss of wages that many family members might face. According to Rege, most who get counselling are those who are also seeking legal redressal. There is better follow up in cases of domestic violence, but numbers drop again when suicide is attempted.
  • How to deal with questioning by the police: Police tend to ask doctors questions like, is the victim habituated to sexual intercourse or is the accused capable of intercourse, Rege said. CEHAT asked doctors not to answer such questions and documented them to show the DIG. The response from the police was either denial or an invitation to provide training Rege said. Our role in intervention is to be there for the victim in every way she wants, she added.
  • Was informed consent necessary or did the victim have a responsibility to report an assault? Rege explained that the central government had released guidelines on how medico-legal assessment must be done. Informed consent is important though the concept created fear among health professionals. Informed consent is the key in increasing the agency of the survivor. Because of the law on mandatory reporting, Rege added that CEHAT facilitated informed refusal. “We need to be able to approach healthcare as separate from legal issues. What are the compelling reasons for refusal? And are we offering treatment or making it conditional to reporting?” she asked. Survivors need to be provided time, space, respect to survivors before they are treated or examined. Informed consent is particularly important given the amount of power doctors have in a medical context.
  • Indian law makes the victim a witness in her own case. Kapoor explained how this often leaves the victim vulnerable. “Because I am witness, i have a right to lawyer but only if Public Prosecutor permits me. This leads to situations where there is unequal competition between overworked PPs and defence lawyers and is hugely problematic thing,” she said.
  • Health systems cannot be islands: Rege points out that there are guidelines on how doctors can interact with PPs and defend their findings in court.
  • “We need to stop depicting sexual assault as the worst thing that can happen”, Kapoor said responding to a question on how survivors cope after assault. While confidentiality is important, we also say that there should be no stigma attached to victims of sexual assault, and therefore no confidentiality. However, as long as chastity is valued, and it is believed that women would rather die than be raped, there will be stigma. This is a struggle and till then we need to provide support.
  • The lack of guidance for private practitioners in dealing with sexual assault cases was raised. Rege pointed out that thanks to the new law, the private sector is awakening to these issues.
  • Persistence of potency tests: Jagtap and Rege raised the issue of the forensic community’s obsession with potency tests in the cases of sexual assault even though such tests are legally irrelevant. Kapoor pointed out that the entire system was geared to understand rape in terms of peno-vaginal penetration but with changes in the law, training needs to be imparted to police and members of the judiciary.

Establishing Hospital-based Crises Centres: The Dilaasa Model
Dr Rajani Jagtap, Dilaasa, Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation


Jagtap argued that as the healthcare provider is the first point of contact for any victim of domestic or sexual violence, it is important that she be sensitised. Doctors may treat injuries and not humans, they may think there is no time to look beyond the injury and arrive at the cause of the injury, she said. Further, doctors are the products of the same society as victims and abusers. She stressed the need for changes in the curricula of medical and paramedical courses before outlining the functioning of the Dilaasa crisis centre.

According to Jagtap, Dilaasa aims to ‘institutionalise’ domestic violence and make the hospital and important reference point for the victim. Every single person that a victim may come in contact with ought to be gender-sensitised and patient-friendly, she said. The idea is to train not only doctors but paramedical staff, social workers and lab staff as well. The guidelines, resources and training was provided by CEHAT in 2001. The superintendent of the peripheral hospital was the project director and initially, staff from different hospitals were trained so that they could return and train their colleagues. They were taught the differences between sex and gender, about gender stereotypes and violence as power play.

The first crisis centre was set up in 2001 and the second was started three years later. The centres operated during hospital hours and by staff were trained to handle the victims. From 2001 to 2006 the project was replicated in all peripheral hospitals, and is now managed by the BMC. From 2010 to 2013, the Dilaasa model has also been replicated in Shillong and Bangalore.

According to Jagtap, the Dilaasa model involves looking beyond the obvious injuries. Even symptoms such as tingling and numbness or chronic anaemia can indicate violence at homes. Sometimes, apparently silly problems may be a front for deeper issues. Jagtap urged doctors to ask what was happening. Sometimes, these lines of enquiry can lead to a breakthrough. Another key factor Jagtap highlighted is privacy and confidentiality. A woman might have come with her abuser or the family of her abuser. Her injuries may be manifested in indirect ways. For instance, a woman with severe abdominal pain was found to have an anal tear from her husband forcing anal sex with her. She urged doctors to be non-judgmental and finally, to tell the patient that what is happening to her is wrong, that action can be taken and that violence is not acceptable. She pointed out that persons with physical and mental disabilities were particularly vulnerable to abuse.

She stressed the importance of documentation and ensuring the safety of the patient, highlighting the option to provide admission for 72 hours so that the victim has shelter from her abuser. After treatment of the patient, referrals must be made, but the victim must be assured that it is not required for her to visit the crisis centre.

The following issues emerged in the discussion that followed Jagtap’s presentation:

  • Efforts to educate service providers on violence against gay men or transgender: Rege admitted that within public hospitals, educating staff on same sex couple violence and violence against transgenders posed a huge challenge as staff were very conservative so much so that CEHAT had included training on communal attitudes among staff.
  • The importance of ICT: Rege said that when Dilaasa was first set up, none of the doctors were making referrals. When asked why they revealed that they felt very awkward so CEHAT created a set of guidelines and questions -- what to ask and how to ask it with a chart for every department. Now, 10 to 12 per cent of women came to Dilaasa purely on the basis of ICTs, Rege said.
  • There are a large number of geriatric women who face abuse from their daughters in law or alcoholic sons. They do not normally come to Dilaasa.
  • CEHAT works with secondary level hospitals and Auxiliary Nurse Midwives who take the message into communities.
  • Disability renders women doubly vulnerable especially when they are abused by their caregivers and are unable to live independently, a social worker points out. Kapoor says that all circumstances must be considered when dealing with such cases while Rege said that women with mental illness followed up the most. She also highlighted the practice of men having their marriages annulled by certifying their wives mentally ill or retarded. She added that in most cases of domestic violence against the disabled, the woman is brought to the crisis centre by her natal family. When the caregiver is the abuser, situations need to be created to encourage the victim to reveal the abuse.

Postscript from Prajnya:

The discussions at the roundtable drew our attention, once again, to the work that remains to be done if women who experience violence are to receive the support they need from health services. Hospitals need to establish and follow the right protocols - in gathering and documenting evidence, in training health care professionals and in ensuring that they do not impede a woman’s right to justice. Doctors need to unlearn, learn and relearn the required skills and attitudes to respond to a survivor of violence. Medical college curricula needs to be drastically modified to incorporate basic ideas of gender equality and gender justice. In the coming months, we hope to follow up on at least some of the ideas that emerged from the discussions at this programme and take this conversation to a range of healthcare providers in Chennai.