When Deepa left the hospital, she was not aware that a copper-T had been inserted into her.
She had just delivered a second child, another son, and wanted to undergo a sterilisation procedure. But the childbirth was done through a C-section surgery, and, Deepa says, “The doctor told me that both the operations [cesarean and tubal ligation] cannot be performed at the same time.”
The doctor recommended a copper-T instead. Deepa and her husband Naveen (not their real names) believed it was only a suggestion.
Around four days after her delivery in May 2018, 21-year-old Deepa was discharged from the Delhi government-run Deen Dayal Upadhyay Hospital. “We were not aware that the doctor had inserted a copper-T,” says Naveen.
It was only around a week later, when the ASHA worker in their area read the hospital discharge report – which Deepa and Naveen had not read – that they realised what had happened.
A copper-T is an intrauterine contraceptive device (IUD) that is inserted in the uterus to avoid pregnancy. “It can take up to three months to adjust, and may sometimes cause discomfort to some. This is why we usually tell patients to come for regular check-ups at the dispensary [for up to six months],” explains 36-year-old Sushila Devi, the ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activist) who has been working in Deepa’s neighbourhood since 2013.
But Deepa felt no discomfort during the first three months, and, preoccupied with her older son’s illness, she didn’t go for check-ups. She simply decided to continue using the T.









