Pallavi Gavit, five months pregnant, had been writhing in pain on a khat (charpoy) for over three hours. Her sister-in-law Sapna Garel, 45, was with her when Pallavi’s uterus slipped out of her vagina, a five-month-old male foetus lifeless inside. In unbearable pain, blood and secretions dripping onto the floor, Pallavi fell unconscious.
It was 3 a.m. on July 25, 2019. The rain was hammering down on Pallavi's thatched hut in Henglapaani, a hamlet of 55 Bhil families is in the Satpuda hills. In this inaccessible part of Nandurbar district in northwestern Maharashtra, there are no pucca roads, no mobile networks. “Emergencies don’t come by invitation. They can occur anytime," says Pallavi's husband Girish (all names have been changed in this story). "Without network coverage, how can we even call an ambulance or doctor?”
“I was terrified," 30-year-old Girish continues. "I didn’t want her to die.” At 4 a.m., in the dark and in pelting rain, Girish and a neighbour carried Pallavi on a makeshift bamboo-and-bedsheet stretcher up the slushy Satpuda hills towards Dhadgaon, 105 kilometres away.
Henglapaani hamlet is in the Toranmal gram panchayat region of Akrani taluka. The Toranmal rural hospital would have been closer, but that road was not safe that night. Barefoot (the wet mud makes it difficult to wear slippers), Girish and his neighbour struggled to get a grip on the muddy pathways. Pallavi, covered with a plastic sheet, was moaning in pain.
They climbed uphill for nearly three hours until they reached the Toranmal Ghat road. “It is around 30 kilometres uphill,” says Girish. From there, they paid Rs. 1,000 to hire a jeep that drove them towards Dhadgaon village. After five hours on the road, Pallavi was admitted to a private nursing home in Dhadgaon – the rural hospital there was a further 10 kilometres away. “I took her to the very first dawakhana [health facility] I saw. It was expensive, but at least they saved my Pallavi,” he says. The doctor charged them Rs. 3,000 and discharged her the next day. “He said she could have died from the heavy bleeding,” Girish recalls.


!['My kaat [uterus] keeps coming out'](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fproduction.ruralindiaonline.org%2Fuploads%2F01_Prolapsed_Uterus_JS_ea0207244e.jpg&w=1080&q=75)










