Doctors And Hospitals Are Playing With Lives For Profit
Posted: Sat May 14, 2016 7:19 pm
Doctors And Hospitals Are Playing With Lives For Profit, Say Authors Of Medical Exposé
In their book Dissenting Diagnosis, doctors and activists Abhay Shukla and Arun Gadre give us a chilling inside account of widespread malpractices afflicting the healthcare industry. The nexus between corporate hospitals, pharma companies and doctors has increased the risks and costs of healthcare to such an extent that millions of middle -class Indians descend into poverty when they fall sick. "A country which boasts of being a global superpower, of sending a rocket to Mars, and of being among the largest producers of both doctors and medicines in the world, should be able to ensure good quality, rational health care for everyone in the country," they say.
The rot is deepening with the increasing onslaught of big corporate hospitals, growing pressure from the pharmaceutical industry and the massively expanding clout of medical equipment agencies. New entrants in the private healthcare sector have to fall in line and indulge in unethical operations like commission practice.
One of the respondents in the book, a well-qualified pathologist in a megacity who has been in practice for just nine months, testified that out of nearly 150 doctors he met, only three or four agreed to refer patients to him. That's because he didn't offer commissions.
"the greatest rot is to be found in hospital transactions. Distortions of the 'noble profession' that are beyond our imagination are being perpetuated."
Since the '90s the private medical sector in India has been transformed with the arrival of multinationals, corporate hospitals, private medical colleges et al; they are making enormous profits. At the same time, an estimated 3.5 crore people fall into poverty from illness every year.
There are not-for-profit hospitals in India that regularly perform a normal delivery for Rs.1000, while certain corporate hospitals routinely charge Rs.2.5 lakhs for the same thing...
Doctors reveal how the pharmaceutical industry corrupts their peers with foreign "study tours", even buying clothes, alcohol and other expensive gifts for them.
Hospitals have 'marketing managers' who arrange alcohol parties, organize supposedly educational lectures sponsored by pharmaceutical companies...
An ethical doctor explains issues in detail, gives more time (at least in the first visit), is transparent in rates... he does not investigate just because the patient demands it.
Critically ill patients have died because they didn't have the deposit money on arrival for emergency treatment. Or cases where bodies are not released because bills are not paid.
READ FULL ARTICLE :-
http://www.huffingtonpost.in/prabha-cha ... _ref=india
In their book Dissenting Diagnosis, doctors and activists Abhay Shukla and Arun Gadre give us a chilling inside account of widespread malpractices afflicting the healthcare industry. The nexus between corporate hospitals, pharma companies and doctors has increased the risks and costs of healthcare to such an extent that millions of middle -class Indians descend into poverty when they fall sick. "A country which boasts of being a global superpower, of sending a rocket to Mars, and of being among the largest producers of both doctors and medicines in the world, should be able to ensure good quality, rational health care for everyone in the country," they say.
The rot is deepening with the increasing onslaught of big corporate hospitals, growing pressure from the pharmaceutical industry and the massively expanding clout of medical equipment agencies. New entrants in the private healthcare sector have to fall in line and indulge in unethical operations like commission practice.
One of the respondents in the book, a well-qualified pathologist in a megacity who has been in practice for just nine months, testified that out of nearly 150 doctors he met, only three or four agreed to refer patients to him. That's because he didn't offer commissions.
"the greatest rot is to be found in hospital transactions. Distortions of the 'noble profession' that are beyond our imagination are being perpetuated."
Since the '90s the private medical sector in India has been transformed with the arrival of multinationals, corporate hospitals, private medical colleges et al; they are making enormous profits. At the same time, an estimated 3.5 crore people fall into poverty from illness every year.
There are not-for-profit hospitals in India that regularly perform a normal delivery for Rs.1000, while certain corporate hospitals routinely charge Rs.2.5 lakhs for the same thing...
Doctors reveal how the pharmaceutical industry corrupts their peers with foreign "study tours", even buying clothes, alcohol and other expensive gifts for them.
Hospitals have 'marketing managers' who arrange alcohol parties, organize supposedly educational lectures sponsored by pharmaceutical companies...
An ethical doctor explains issues in detail, gives more time (at least in the first visit), is transparent in rates... he does not investigate just because the patient demands it.
Critically ill patients have died because they didn't have the deposit money on arrival for emergency treatment. Or cases where bodies are not released because bills are not paid.
READ FULL ARTICLE :-
http://www.huffingtonpost.in/prabha-cha ... _ref=india