📷 Image: Wikimedia Commons / Christopher Michel
Health
Rajasthan Mothers File Euthanasia Pleas Over Post‑partum Kidney Injury
✍️ Firstpost
🗓 17 Jul 2026, 10:18 PM
👁 2
Five mothers in Rajasthan have petitioned courts for euthanasia after suffering severe kidney damage following childbirth, drawing attention to the risks of postpartum renal complications.
Five women in Rajasthan have filed legal petitions seeking euthanasia after developing severe kidney injury during the postpartum period. The mothers, who delivered within the last year, claim that the kidney damage has left them in chronic pain and with a deteriorating quality of life.
Medical experts say the injuries are linked to postpartum renal complications such as acute tubular necrosis and pre‑eclampsia‑related kidney failure. Symptoms reported include persistent fatigue, swelling, and reduced urine output, which can progress to irreversible kidney damage if not promptly treated.
Dr. Anil Kumar, a nephrologist at Jaipur’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences, explained that early detection of high blood pressure and proteinuria during pregnancy can prevent most cases. He urged obstetricians to monitor renal function closely in the weeks after delivery.
The petitions have ignited a debate among legal scholars and medical professionals about the ethics of assisted dying for medical conditions that are not terminal but cause unbearable suffering. Courts will now examine whether the law permits euthanasia in such scenarios.
Medical experts say the injuries are linked to postpartum renal complications such as acute tubular necrosis and pre‑eclampsia‑related kidney failure. Symptoms reported include persistent fatigue, swelling, and reduced urine output, which can progress to irreversible kidney damage if not promptly treated.
Dr. Anil Kumar, a nephrologist at Jaipur’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences, explained that early detection of high blood pressure and proteinuria during pregnancy can prevent most cases. He urged obstetricians to monitor renal function closely in the weeks after delivery.
The petitions have ignited a debate among legal scholars and medical professionals about the ethics of assisted dying for medical conditions that are not terminal but cause unbearable suffering. Courts will now examine whether the law permits euthanasia in such scenarios.