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Indian
Women’s Odyssey into the Medical World |
A.Vasantha |
First of July is celebrated as the Doctor’s Day in India. This
day has been chosen to pay homage to doctor Bidhan Chandra Roy
and doctors like him who devoted their lives to the upliftment
of the poor and the needy. Roy was, an eminent physician, and a
dedicated social worker.
The story of Indian women’s struggle to enter the medical
profession reflects their courage, determination and dedication
to a noble cause. Unlike the women in western countries Indian
women did not have to fight the laws or discrimination by the
state to enter this profession. Opposition came mainly from the
society of that time; a society steeped in ancient traditions
with no scope for women to act or think independently The
environment was hostile to a woman to step out of the home, let
alone take up a career.
Missionaries pave the way
When the British rulers opened their hospitals in India, the
attendance of women was almost negligible because of the purdah
(veil) observed by women in many parts of India. Since there was
no woman on the hospital staff, women resented being treated by
men and stayed from hospitals. The plight of women during
confinement owing to lack of medical attendance and the
large-scale infant mortality disturbed many ‘zenana’(women)
missionaries, who decided to do something to mitigate the
sufferings of these women.
The task of women missionaries was not easy. They had to face
the ignorance and prejudices of Indian women, work without
proper instruments and insufficient supportive help and above
all their own inadequate medical knowledge.
The first qualified medical woman to arrive in India was Miss
Clara Swain of U.S.A. who reached Rae Bareily on 2nd January
1870. Soon a stream of missionaries, started pouring into India.
Their main concern was training of nurses and mid-wives and
hospital administration. They introduced hospital nurses into
Indian homes, persuaded Indian women to go to hospitals for
delivery and took part in other social service activities. Two
outstanding medical missionaries, Edith Mary Brown(1864-1956)
and Ida Sophia Scudder(1870-1960) will ever remain in the
collective consciousness of the nation for the legacy they have
left behind to humanity. The Christian Medical College and Brown
Memorial hospital at Ludhiana and the Christian Medical College
at Vellore stand testimony to their work.
In the meantime two contemporary Indian women created history by
breaking the social barriers to become doctors. Both were
Maharashtrians and were victims of child marriage. Anandibai
Joshi was married at the age of ten to a widower almost twenty
years senior to her. She became a mother at the age of fourteen
but unfortunately the child lived only for ten days. A grief
stricken Anandi resolved to become a doctor and help other
women. Rakhmabai’s tale is some what different. She was not
fortunate enough to have a supportive husband like Anandibai.
Married at the age of ten without her consent she rebelled
against the tradition. She matured into a highly esteemed doctor
and rendered invaluable service during the plague in the Bombay
Presidency. She was a pioneer of red cross activity in India and
it was mainly through her that medical aid reached the interior
parts of that Presidency.
Men support women’s cause
Higher education and training for women came through as a result
of the efforts of a few enlightened men. In 1872, Edward
Balfour, the Surgeon General in Madras started an agitation with
the education department for admission of women to the medical
course, but he was successful only partially as the Director of
Public Instruction considered this move as entirely premature
and did not recommend admission of women to medical college.
Three years later Balfour could get them admitted to the
Certificate course. Six years later the first woman to be
admitted was Mary Scharlieb, wife of a Barrister. She took up
the mid-wife’s training at the Government Maternity Hospital in
Madras but found the training very inadequate. The Kasturba
hospital owes its inception to her.
In the Calcutta Presidency, the Calcutta Medical College threw
its doors open to women in 1880 and one Kadambini Ganguly became
its first graduate.
In the Bombay Presidency, George T. Kittredge, an American
business resident fought for medical education for women. He was
not happy with the inferior training provided to women and
observed “I am convinced that for success in India, woman must
be recognized as the equals of men in medical care.”
Medical Funds come to Aid
George T. Kittredge along with one Sorabjee Shapurji Bengalee
organized a fund called the Medical Women for India Fund. Also,
the Lady Dufferin fund created in 1885 gave tremendous impetus
to entry of women into the profession. Both the funds were set
up with the major objective of bringing medical women from
England, arranging for medical education of women in India and
opening hospitals to be staffed by women.
March towards professionalism
The founding of the Association of Medical Women in India in
1907 under the Presidentship of Dr. A.M. Benson, the Medical
Officer at Cama Hospital at Bombay was an initial step in the
professionalisation of women medicos. It was this association
which agitated for the creation of Women’s Medical Service (WMS)
in 1914 on the lines of Indian Medical Service (IMS).
Regrettably the WMS was abolished along with IMS soon after
Independence.
Hilda Mary Lazarus was the first Indian woman to be appointed to
WMS. She became Chief Medical Officer in 1943 and held the post
till her retirement in 1947.
Undoubtedly the woman doctor of early 20th century was
Muthulakshmi Reddy. She entered into the medical world like a
storm and initiated many reforms through legislation like
medical inspection of girls in schools and colleges, suppression
of immoral trafficking in women & children etc,. She made
history when she sought to liberate devadasis from the tyranny
of tradition. The Avvai Rural Medical Service and Cancer
Research Institute at Chennai are her gifts to humanity. She
balanced her role as a mother, wife and a doctor so perfectly
that she is still held as a role model by many.
Though late entrants by world standards women are now entering
the medical profession on equal footing with men. No longer are
the super speciality areas,the preserve of men. Everyday a new
male bastion is broken and women try to prove that they are in
no way inferior to men. However the contributions of the women
pioneers in medicine in India cannot be evaluated in terms of
the present day parameters. As Joshua Jhirad the first Woman
Superintendent of Cama Hospital observed “It was the idea and
urge to serve needy women who could otherwise have gone without
treatment and suffered silently that attracted most of us to
take up medicine.”
*Freelance Writer
Disclaimer: The views expressed by the author in this feature
are entirely her own and do not necessarily reflect the views of
PIB.
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