Uzembe wa Daktari wa Upasuaji Wasababisha Mgonjwa Alipwe Milioni 25....Daktari huyo Aliacha Kitambaa Tumboni mwa Mgonjwa....Ikapelekea Mgonjwa Kuondolewa Mfuko wa Kizazi na Utumbo
Tanzanian woman wins landmark case over childbirth
operation
Reuters By Kizito Makoye
April 17, 2015
DAR ES SALAAM (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A woman left
unable to have children after a defective cesarean section operation in
Tanzania has won a landmark case against a local hospital whose surgeon left a
piece of cloth inside her.
Mwamini Adam and her husband filed a lawsuit at the high
court in western Tabora region against Urambo District Council's hospital four
years ago, demanding 500 million Tanzanian Shillings ($265,000) for physical
and emotional distress.
Adam, 37, accused Jacob Kamanda, a gynaecologist and
obstetrician at the district hospital, of professional negligence and
misconduct after he left a piece of cloth in her stomach after performing a
caesarean section operation.
She told the court her condition deteriorated within days
of the operation on January 6, 2011, in which her baby survived.
"I was very ill and constantly discharging pus. It
was a terrible blow to my family since I could no longer engage in my daily
activities," she said.
She said the defective operation meant she can no longer
give birth because doctors performing a life-saving corrective operation
decided to remove her uterus.
Pregnancy and childbirth are among the biggest dangers
faced by rural women in Tanzania due to a shortage of qualified doctors and
lack of quality health care and maternity services.
Tanzania is one of a list of African nations that have
the world's highest rates of maternal mortality. For every 100,000 live births,
454 women die of childbirth-related complications, according to UNICEF data.
Delivering the verdict this week, High Court Judge Amir
Mruma said the court was convinced Adam suffered significantly due to
negligence by one of the hospital's doctors and ordered hospital owner, Urambo
District Council, to pay compensation.
Lawyers for Adam said this was the first time in Tanzania
that a court had ruled in favor of a woman whose life was put in danger by
defective surgery related to childbirth.
The judge ruled the council pay 25 million Tanzanian
Shillings with accumulated interest to Adam and her husband and also cover the
costs of the law suit.
($1 = 1,885.0000 Tanzanian shillings)
(Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)
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