Title: Same Old Faces, Every District — Self-Styled Leaders and YouTube “Judges”!
No matter which district you go to in India today, the story is painfully familiar.
Providing medical care has slowly turned into a high-risk job. Every doctor knows that casualties and unexpected deaths are an unfortunate but unavoidable part of medicine. Yet these days, every tragedy is being shamelessly turned into “content” for views and “vote banks” for cheap politics.
Here’s how the same dirty pattern plays out in almost every district:
It usually starts with a serious case landing in the casualty ward — a road accident, a heart attack, or a critically ill patient. The doctors are already battling against time, doing everything humanly possible.
And then, like clockwork, they arrive.
A local neta, accompanied by a few musclemen and a YouTube “journalist” with a camera crew, barges into the hospital without being called.
The neta, with dramatic flair, shouts in front of the grieving family:
“Doctor sahab, yeh kya ho raha hai? Aap log patient ko marne ke liye chod dete ho? Yeh toh qatl hai!”
The YouTuber, holding the mic close to the weeping relatives, adds fuel to the fire:
“Aap log bataiye — hospital mein doctor log kya kar rahe the? Kitna time laga diya? Yeh negligence hai ya murder?”
The doctor, exhausted after 18–20 hours of duty, tries to explain calmly:
“Sir, the patient came to us in a very critical condition. We had already explained the poor prognosis to the family at the time of admission. We did everything possible according to protocol…”
But who is listening?
The crowd has already turned hostile. Slogans start. Phones are recording. The real medical facts disappear in the noise of shouting and accusations.
One senior doctor, speaking privately later, said with a heavy sigh:
“Ab toh critical cases dekh kar hi darr lagta hai. Ek galti nahi, ek unfortunate outcome bhi ho gaya toh humari zindagi kharab ho jayegi. Family ko toh samjha sakte hain, lekin yeh log toh bas drama chahte hain.”
The result?
Good doctors in smaller towns and districts are now scared of taking up high-risk cases. Many have started referring serious patients to bigger cities, even when they could have managed them. Some are even thinking of quitting government service or moving abroad.
If this madness continues, the day is not far when district hospitals will start shutting down their emergency services. Common people will then have to travel hundreds of kilometres even for basic emergencies.
It’s high time the medical community stood united and raised a strong voice.
Service is not a political battlefield.
Stop turning hospitals into arenas for cheap drama and vote-bank politics!
Doctors save lives.
Don’t make their job a daily nightmare.










