On a Thursday, at around 1 pm, many women had gathered at a community health centre in Uttar Pradesh’s Mahoba district. They were all waiting for their turn to undergo a procedure for permanent contraception, sterilisation or the sealing of the fallopian tubes. Thursdays, across public health facilities in Uttar Pradesh, are reserved for sterilisation surgeries and vasectomies for men that block the sperm – both, methods of contraception.

There were men who had accompanied women, but there were no men waiting for their own surgeries when IndiaSpend visited the Jaitpur community health centre in Mahoba.

Why did Rajesh Kumar (38), a resident of Barkheda village, not opt for a vasectomy, and why was his wife, Gudiya, undergoing sterilisation? A few women sitting behind him giggled on hearing the question. After a long pause, Rajesh said: “I feel scared.”

Between 2019 and 2021, nearly 38% of women surveyed nationwide for the fifth National Family Health Survey had undergone sterilisation, compared to just 0.3% of men who had undergone a vasectomy. In comparison, 17% of women surveyed in Uttar Pradesh had undergone sterilisation compared to 0.1% of men.

Men fear vasectomies

“We perform 30 family planning procedures in a day, and all the patients are women,” said PK Singh, the medical superintendent at the Jaitpur community health centre. “A lot of money is spent on creating family planning awareness, but men still hesitate. In the year 2020, while 545 women came to us, only three men opted for a vasectomy.”

In 2020, the number of men opting for family planning procedures in Jaitpur, at three, was the most of all community health centres in the district, said Singh.

When Accredited Social Health Activists, or ASHAs, visit homes to encourage men and women to adopt contraception, they find that the men are reluctant. “We encourage the men too, but they very sternly tell us that it is the women who will have to undergo the procedure,” said Ram Sati, an ASHA worker from Lamora village in Mahoba. “Even the women say they will opt for it as they don’t want to bother the men.”

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One of the reasons is the myths behind the procedure. “There is a general perception that men become weak after family planning procedures,” said Omvati, an ASHA worker, who lives in Akona village. “We tell them that it is a simple procedure and they would not even have to get stitches, they still hesitate. Even the women feel their husbands will become weak if they would opt for it.”

When we spoke to men who were accompanying their wives for family planning procedures, they echoed Omvati’s words. “I do not know a single man who has opted for this, which is why I feel scared,” said 42-year-old Manoj. “As mostly it is the women who are undergoing this procedure, I asked my wife to go for it. I have heard that men become weak after this operation.” When asked where he got that information, he said: “Everyone says so.”

To encourage men to opt for the family planning procedure, the government organises a nasbandi pakhwada (a vasectomy awareness programme) every year. The men are counselled at these drives, yet there is no change in the numbers.

Poor facilities

On a chilly winter night in December 2021, several women lay on thin mattresses on the floor in Mehrauni community health centre in Uttar Pradesh’s Lalitpur district. Some family members were carrying women on their backs after the operation, as there were not enough stretchers for all those who had come.

“There is not enough space in the community health centre. I do not have enough beds, so we give the patients mattresses,” said MP Singh, the community health centre’s medical superintendent. “We advise them to go home after the procedure and call them from time-to-time for check-ups.”

Women do not get the kind of care they should be getting after undergoing family planning procedures. At the Birgha community health centre in Lalitpur, women were lying down on the floor on mattresses after their operation. The community health centre’s medical superintendent, Chatrapal Singh, said: “We perform 30 procedures in a day. We have 10-12 beds as well as mattresses.”

When asked if women have to stay at community health centres for a few days after the procedure, he said: “There is a norm that they have to be kept under observation for at least one day/night, but we do not have enough beds. Besides, they themselves are not very comfortable about staying at the community health centre and choose to go home.”

Low awareness

India’s family planning campaigns, run by both its public health systems and civil society programmes, are focused almost entirely on women, found a study by the International Center for Research on Women. Further, men are the ones who make decisions on how many children a couple should have and when, as we reported in September 2020.

Up to 54% of men said that their wives could not use contraception without their permission and one-fifth believed that it is a woman’s responsibility to avoid pregnancy – 31% of women agreed with this – said a study on masculinity conducted by International Center for Research on Women and the United Nations Population Fund in 2014.

“There are two reasons behind fewer men opting for family planning procedures,” said Amulya Nidhi, the national co-convener of the Jan Swasthya Abhiyan, a network of civil society organisations working for health rights. “First, there are not many male health workers in villages. The primary focus of ASHA workers and ANMs [Auxiliary Nurse Midwives] are women. Men often get neglected. Second, health officials/authorities are not held responsible for a smaller number of vasectomies.”

“It is written in our Constitution that there should be no discrimination between men and women,” Nidhi said. “However, no one is bothered to find solutions where such discrimination happens.”

The village sub-centres require 1,57,000 male health workers. However, only 82,857 posts had been approved of which, 59,348 were filled, and 29,421 vacant, according to a reply in the Lok Sabha on February 5, 2021.

In contrast, there are more female health workers in the field than required: there were 2,05,000 female health workers hired, when the requirement was 1,57,000 and the sanctioned posts 1,83,936.

This article first appeared on IndiaSpend, a data-driven and public-interest journalism non-profit.