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“For us, everything has been a struggle. He was our only child and we wanted him to be happy,” cried Josephine.
A simple enough hair transplant turned into a horrific ordeal leading to the death of Josephine’s only son Santosh Kumar, a final year MBBS student at the Madras Medical College.
Santosh’s parents Josephine and Pandiaraj want justice for him, a son born 12 years after their marriage.
Though Santosh died on 17 May, the story came to the fore following a report by Pushpa Narayan in The Times of India.
The centre has now been sealed by authorities. The transplant was done by Dr Hariprasad Kasturi, an anaesthetist, and Dr A Vineeth Suryakumar, a doctor who got his MBBS degree from a college in China.
He suffered from grade 2 baldness: a condition where one loses hair at the front of their head.
Santosh had opted for Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE), a technique in which follicular units are removed directly from the donor area. The grafts are then transplanted into the bald areas.
It is performed under local anaesthesia and the procedure needs to be performed by a surgeon as it is considered a minor surgical procedure.
Moreover, Dr Hariprasad Kasturi, the anaesthetist was not present throughout the procedure after administering anesthesia – another basic requirement ignored.
Santosh’s friend Jayapraveen said that he had not been planning an immediate transplant and simply wanted to consult various centres.
The cost? Rs 1,20,000 to Rs1,50,000.
Gradually, Santosh showed signs of discomfort as the follicles were being replanted and was taken to the clinic where the anaesthetist worked. Drowsiness and a fever persisted, but the doctor had assured him that nothing was wrong and this wasn’t unusual.
As he left for his hometown Arni in Thiruvannamalai, it only got worse – fever, diarrhoea and vomiting. The next day his family admitted him to CMC Vellore, where he was shifted to the ICU.
And finally, he succumbed to a cardiac arrest on 17 May. Santosh had organ failure due to delayed anaphylaxis, an allergic reaction which can be triggered by anaesthesia.
Initially, the family did not want to file a police complaint because they wanted a peaceful cremation. But 3 days after his death, Santosh’s friends convinced the family to file a police complaint, but were turned down by the police due to lack of evidence.
The Directorate took strict action and Santosh’s friends were relieved to see that the transplant centre had been sealed on their orders. The day after, the police finally agreed to file a complaint.
The negligence of an unqualified doctor cost a life, rues Santosh’s father Pandiaraj.
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