Yes. Nurses are briefed on patients' conditions/ailments and are often more knowledgable about those conditions and situations than the doctors performing the operations because they spend more time with patients than the surgeons.Ok so would a nurse necessarily know the Doctor in question hadn't found reason for the operation to happen and was pulling a fast one?
More importantly, these women *might* have had conditions that required hysterectomies, though the list of life-threatening ailments that justify performing this irreversible operation on otherwise healthy women of child-bearing age is pretty short (cancer/tumors and uncontrollable vaginal bleeding). Perfoming this operation on women who have had heavy menstrual cycles, as the complaint alleges, is NOT one of them. It's medical malpractice *at best*, and probably criminal. But again, for the sake of argument, let's say there were some underlying conditions that MAY have required hysterectomies for these women -- then why were doctors in this medical facility denying these women other basic healthcare? They apparently didn't give a shit about detainees' health before, but suddenly they identify ailments that require major, invasive surgery that sterilizes the patients? Does that add up to you?
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