Recognition has come to her post-retirement. She was awarded the Padma Shri this January. Lhadol was also among the 1,000 women shortlisted worldwide last year for the aborted move to award them a collective Nobel Peace Prize. Can just one doctor make such a difference? Though today Leh and Kargil both have four gynaecologists, Lhadol remembers a time not too long ago when she used to hold health and family planning awareness camps in remote areas alone. "It’s a question of mutual trust. I know the family background and circumstances of the women coming to me. Initially, it was tough to convince them and they used to come secretly. But now they hardly have any inhibitions," says Lhadol. Proof of this is the fact that there are hardly any couples in the child- bearing age today who have more than two or three children. Correspondingly, maternal mortality here is nil against a national average of 480 per 10,0000 women. Till about 20 years ago, it was common to find women in Ladakh with seven to eight children. In Zanskar, Nubra or even Shia-dominated Kargil, the doctor’s camps have been a huge success. "It’s a myth that Muslims are averse to family planning," she says.