Doctor, heal thyself
Denying women anaesthesia during abortions is a legacy of the Soviet Union's obsessive pronatalism

There was widespread anger and revulsion this week when several women in the western Siberian city of Surgut went public about being denied anaesthesia or painkillers when having an abortion at the city’s main hospital. According to Mediazona, the hospital’s chief physician Mikhail Kurnosikov performed the procedures in question, and while the regional Health Ministry has said it is currently looking into the allegations, Kurnosikov himself has dismissed the allegations as “harassment” by “foreign agents”.
Doctors were under constant pressure to increase the birth rate, and were instructed to do whatever they deemed necessary to dissuade their patients from terminating pregnancies.
Neither the enduring stigma of abortion nor the Soviet government’s determination to stimulate population growth alone can sufficiently explain away such terrible levels of cruelty.
The authorities’ tacit encouragement of medical torture during such procedures, however repugnant, may well be its chosen alternative for dissuading women from terminating pregnancies.


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