| Literature DB >> 25433681 |
Nayreen Daruwalla, Jyoti Belur, Meena Kumar, Vinay Tiwari, Sujata Sarabahi, Nick Tilley, David Osrin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most burns happen in low- and middle-income countries. In India, deaths related to burns are more common in women than in men and occur against a complex background in which the cause - accidental or non-accidental, suicidal or homicidal - is often unclear. Our study aimed to understand the antecedents to burns and the problem of ascribing cause, the sequence of medicolegal events after a woman was admitted to hospital, and potential opportunities for improvement.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25433681 PMCID: PMC4260258 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-014-0142-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Sociodemographic and burn characteristics of 33 women admitted to burns units at two urban tertiary hospitals
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| <20 y | 5 | Unmarried | 3 | Chawl | 9 |
| 20–24 y | 16 | Married | 29 | Flat | 6 |
| 25–29 y | 3 | Separated | 1 | House | 10 |
| > = 30 y | 9 |
| Room | 2 | |
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| Arranged marriage | 23 | Zopadpatti (informal settlement) | 4 | |
| Unable to read | 12 | Love marriage | 5 | Unknown | 2 |
| Unknown | 1 | ||||
| Reads with difficulty | 5 |
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| Reads with ease | 13 | <7 y | 16 | Kitchen | 22 |
| Unknown | 3 | 7–10 y | 5 | Other indoor | 1 |
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| 10–19 y | 3 | Unlocated | 10 | |
| None | 10 | > = 20 y | 4 |
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| Primary | 5 | Unknown | 1 | Flame | 17 |
| Secondary | 11 |
| Kerosene | 10 | |
| Higher | 4 | No | 12 | Unspecified | 6 |
| Unknown | 3 | Yes | 17 |
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| 12 | <20% | 1 | |
| Hindu | 26 |
| 20–29% | 2 | |
| Muslim | 7 | Nuclear | 22 | 30–39% | 4 |
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| Joint or extended | 9 | 40–49% | 7 | |
| Never employed | 15 | Natal | 1 | 50–59% | 3 |
| Not currently employed | 6 | Unknown | 1 | 60–69% | 3 |
| Makes products | 3 |
| 70–79% | 4 | |
| Unskilled job | 3 | Client | 1 | 80–89% | 3 |
| Shop, market, hotel, transport | 1 | Husband | 1 | 90–100% | 3 |
| Student | 1 | In-laws | 9 | Unknown | 3 |
| Junior white collar | 1 | Natal family | 3 | ||
| Schoolteacher | 1 | Quarters | 1 | ||
| Unknown | 2 | Rental | 16 | ||
| Unknown | 2 |
Figure 1Schematic summary of duties of clinicians and police when women are admitted to hospital with burns. Steps beginning with the lodging of a First Information Report depend on an allegation being made.
Legal provision for women in India who suffer burns
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| Section 174 | Response to suicide, homicide, accident, or death under suspicious circumstances. |
| Applied particularly to women within seven years of marriage. | |
| Duty to report incident to magistrate empowered to hold inquests. | |
| Duty to proceed to the place where the body of the deceased lies, and, in the presence of two or more residents of the neighborhood, make an investigation and draw up a report of the apparent cause of death, describing signs of injury and how they appear to have been inflicted. | |
| Section 176 | Duties of Magistrate empowered to hold an inquest. |
| Amended in 2005 to apply to death in custody. | |
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| Section 304 | Punishment for culpable homicide not amounting to murder. |
| If the act that led to death was done with the intention of causing death or injury likely to cause death, or with the knowledge that it was likely to do so but not the intention of causing death. | |
| Minimum sentence: fine. | |
| Maximum sentence: imprisonment for life or 10 years. | |
| Section 304B | Punishment for dowry death. |
| Death by burns, injury, or in other abnormal circumstances of a woman within seven years of marriage, if it is shown that soon before her death she was subjected to cruelty or harassment by her husband or his relative in connection with a demand for dowry. | |
| Minimum sentence: 7 years. | |
| Maximum sentence: imprisonment for life. | |
| Section 306 | Abetment of suicide. |
| Minimum sentence: fine. | |
| Maximum sentence: imprisonment for 10 years. | |
| Section 498A | Cruelty by husband or his relative. |
| Willful conduct that could drive a woman to suicide, serious self-harm or ill-health, harassment with a view to the unlawful acquisition of property or valuable security, or harassment when she does not meet such demands. | |
| Cruelty defined as willful conduct of a nature likely to drive the woman to commit suicide or to cause grave injury or danger to life, limb or mental or physical health; or harassment with a view to coercing her or any person related to her to meet an unlawful demand for property or valuable security, or on account of a failure to meet such demand. | |
| Minimum sentence: fine. | |
| Maximum sentence: imprisonment for 3 years. |
Figure 2Some ideas about the background to burns to women, with two overlapping themes.