The Slow Death of the Neighbourhood Clinic: What 1,750 Shutdowns Are Telling Kerala’s Doctors
▲ 22 r/Kerala

The Slow Death of the Neighbourhood Clinic: What 1,750 Shutdowns Are Telling Kerala’s Doctors

By Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

A few months back, a senior colleague — someone who’d run a 15-bed nursing home in his hometown for almost two decades — called me with a question I didn’t expect. He wasn’t asking about a negligence notice or a compliance audit. He was asking whether he should just shut the place down.
Not because his patients had left him. They hadn’t. But because the paperwork, the staffing ratios, the fire-safety upgrades, the biomedical waste contracts — all built for a 200-bed hospital — had landed on his desk exactly as they would on a corporate chain’s. He didn’t have a compliance officer. He had himself, a part-time nurse, and a loyalty built over twenty years that suddenly counted for nothing on a government checklist.
He shut it down three weeks later.
The numbers behind that phone call
I used to think his story was an outlier. It isn’t. It’s a pattern, and the data confirms it. Roughly 1,306 outpatient clinics and 444 small hospitals have closed across Kerala in the last five years alone. Compare that to the previous five-year stretch — 2016 to 2021 — when only 148 clinics and 262 small hospitals shut down. That’s not a gradual decline. That’s a cliff edge.
And here’s the part that should make every one of us pause: while small, doctor-run clinics are disappearing, the total number of hospitals in Kerala has actually gone up — from 3,677 in 2021 to over 5,400 now. So healthcare isn’t shrinking. It’s consolidating. The neighbourhood doctor is being replaced by the corporate chain, bed by bed, district by district.
Why is this happening?
A few things are converging at once, and none of them are villains on their own — which is what makes this so hard to fix.
First, regulation. The Kerala Clinical Establishments Act was written with good intentions — patient safety, standardisation, accountability. But a one-size-fits-all enforcement model doesn’t distinguish between a 300-bed super-speciality hospital with a legal and compliance department, and a 10-bed nursing home run by a husband-wife doctor team. The Kerala High Court had to direct the government to implement the Act without further delay, and only this March did the state begin discussing concessions for smaller establishments. That relief, frankly, has come after a lot of damage was already done.
Second, patient behaviour has shifted. Insurance-backed treatment is increasingly the default, and most insurance panels favour larger, empanelled hospitals. A patient with a fever who once walked to the family doctor two streets away now drives to a multi-specialty hospital, partly out of habit, partly out of a very real — if sometimes exaggerated — fear that anything less is inadequate care.
Third — and this one is personal for a lot of us — young doctors simply don’t want to run small clinics anymore. Between the medico-legal exposure of solo practice, rising incidents of violence against doctors, and pay structures so poor that a Casualty Medical Officer post recently offered ₹42,000 a month against IMA’s demand of ₹80,000, why would a young MBBS graduate choose the uncertainty of an independent practice over a salaried corporate job or a flight to the Gulf?
What we lose when the family clinic disappears
I want to be careful here, because this isn’t an argument against corporate hospitals or against regulation. Both have raised the standard of care in this state. But there’s a real cost to what’s happening, and it isn’t showing up in any state health bulletin yet.
Small clinics have historically absorbed the bulk of India’s out-of-pocket healthcare spending at its cheapest point of entry. When they vanish, patients don’t stop needing care — they simply pay more for the same fever, the same blood pressure check, the same follow-up visit, because their only remaining option is a facility with an entirely different cost structure. Ironically, the very system meant to protect patients through better-regulated care is quietly pushing up the price of getting any care at all.
There’s also something harder to quantify: continuity. A family doctor who has treated three generations of the same household carries clinical context that no hospital’s electronic record can replicate on a first visit. That relationship is part of patient safety too — and it’s disappearing along with the clinics.
What actually needs to happen
I don’t think the answer is less regulation. As a medico-legal consultant, I’ve seen too many cases where poor documentation and casual compliance genuinely hurt patients. But regulation has to be right-sized.
• Categorise compliance requirements by bed strength and service complexity — not just on paper, but in actual enforcement practice at the district level.
• Fast-track the concessions the state has already discussed for small establishments, instead of letting them sit in committee.
• Build a genuine grievance and support mechanism for small clinic owners navigating the Act, not just an inspection mechanism.
• Address the economics of solo and small-group practice directly — insurance empanelment access, security protections, and fair reimbursement — so staying independent isn’t a financial sacrifice.
The neighbourhood clinic isn’t a nostalgic idea. It’s infrastructure — the first, cheapest, most accessible layer of Kerala’s healthcare system. We built one of India’s best health outcomes on the back of exactly this kind of accessible, trusted, doctor-run care. Losing it quietly, one shut shutter at a time, isn’t progress. It’s a gap we will notice only once it’s too wide to fill the gap.

#Healthcare Regulations #Remote Clinics
#Medical Clinics #Small Hospitals
#Kerala Healthcare System #Indian Healthcare Systems #Health and Wellness #Primary Healthcare

Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

u/drirsh — 4 hours ago

Foreign Investment in Kerala’s Healthcare: Progress or a Warning Sign?

As a doctor, I am not against investment. Every modern healthcare system needs capital, technology, infrastructure, and innovation. Kerala’s hospitals have grown over the years because people were willing to invest in healthcare. New buildings, advanced equipment, and specialized services are important. But there is a difference between investment that strengthens healthcare and investment that slowly turns healthcare into just another business.
Kerala has long been proud of its healthcare system. For decades, we have pointed to our health indicators as proof that quality care can coexist with social responsibility. Patients trusted doctors. Doctors trusted the system. Healthcare was seen primarily as a service, not a product.
Today, however, there are signs that deserve our attention.
As large investors and corporate interests enter the healthcare sector, the focus can gradually shift from patients to profitability. This does not happen overnight. It begins quietly—with increasing treatment costs, pressure to generate revenue, aggressive expansion strategies, and healthcare becoming more expensive for ordinary families.
The concern is not that foreign investment is inherently bad. The concern is what happens when financial returns become the primary goal. Healthcare is unlike any other industry. A patient entering a hospital is not a customer shopping for a luxury product. They are often frightened, vulnerable, and dependent on the advice they receive.
At the same time, another problem is growing in plain sight. Across many parts of the country, unqualified practitioners and quacks continue to exploit gaps in regulation. While qualified doctors face increasing scrutiny, paperwork, and regulations, illegal and unsafe medical practices often continue unchecked. This creates a dangerous situation where genuine healthcare becomes more expensive while unsafe alternatives continue to thrive.
For ordinary people, the result is simple: healthcare costs keep rising. Investigations become costlier. Insurance premiums increase. Hospital bills become more difficult to understand. Families that once worried about disease now worry about how they will pay for treatment.
There is also a larger economic question. When ownership increasingly moves beyond local communities, a significant share of profits generated from healthcare may leave the state or even the country. Money paid by patients in Kerala should ideally contribute to strengthening healthcare services, training professionals, improving infrastructure, and supporting local development. If healthcare becomes primarily an investment vehicle, society must ask who truly benefits.
Perhaps the greatest danger is complacency. Kerala often takes pride in having one of the best healthcare systems in India. That pride was earned. But pride can become arrogance when it prevents honest self-examination. No healthcare system remains excellent simply because it was excellent in the past.
We are already seeing warning signs: rising costs, workforce shortages, increasing commercialization, growing dependence on corporate healthcare, and persistent gaps in regulation. None of these issues alone will destroy a healthcare system. Together, however, they can slowly weaken the foundations that made it strong.
The answer is not to reject investment. The answer is to regulate wisely, protect patients, strengthen public healthcare, crack down on quackery, and ensure that healthcare remains a public good rather than merely a profitable industry.
Kerala’s healthcare system did not become respected by accident. It was built through decades of public trust, dedicated professionals, and a commitment to putting people before profits. If we fail to protect those values, the decline will not be sudden. It will be gradual, almost unnoticed—until one day we realize that the system we once celebrated is no longer the system we have.
By then, rebuilding trust may be far more difficult than preserving it today.

**Overconfidence in Kerala’s healthcare reputation**, which may prevent honest discussion about current challenges.

Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

reddit.com
u/drirsh — 13 hours ago

Foreign Investment in Kerala’s Healthcare: Progress or a Warning Sign?

As a doctor, I am not against investment. Every modern healthcare system needs capital, technology, infrastructure, and innovation. Kerala’s hospitals have grown over the years because people were willing to invest in healthcare. New buildings, advanced equipment, and specialized services are important. But there is a difference between investment that strengthens healthcare and investment that slowly turns healthcare into just another business.
Kerala has long been proud of its healthcare system. For decades, we have pointed to our health indicators as proof that quality care can coexist with social responsibility. Patients trusted doctors. Doctors trusted the system. Healthcare was seen primarily as a service, not a product.
Today, however, there are signs that deserve our attention.
As large investors and corporate interests enter the healthcare sector, the focus can gradually shift from patients to profitability. This does not happen overnight. It begins quietly—with increasing treatment costs, pressure to generate revenue, aggressive expansion strategies, and healthcare becoming more expensive for ordinary families.
The concern is not that foreign investment is inherently bad. The concern is what happens when financial returns become the primary goal. Healthcare is unlike any other industry. A patient entering a hospital is not a customer shopping for a luxury product. They are often frightened, vulnerable, and dependent on the advice they receive.
At the same time, another problem is growing in plain sight. Across many parts of the country, unqualified practitioners and quacks continue to exploit gaps in regulation. While qualified doctors face increasing scrutiny, paperwork, and regulations, illegal and unsafe medical practices often continue unchecked. This creates a dangerous situation where genuine healthcare becomes more expensive while unsafe alternatives continue to thrive.
For ordinary people, the result is simple: healthcare costs keep rising. Investigations become costlier. Insurance premiums increase. Hospital bills become more difficult to understand. Families that once worried about disease now worry about how they will pay for treatment.
There is also a larger economic question. When ownership increasingly moves beyond local communities, a significant share of profits generated from healthcare may leave the state or even the country. Money paid by patients in Kerala should ideally contribute to strengthening healthcare services, training professionals, improving infrastructure, and supporting local development. If healthcare becomes primarily an investment vehicle, society must ask who truly benefits.
Perhaps the greatest danger is complacency. Kerala often takes pride in having one of the best healthcare systems in India. That pride was earned. But pride can become arrogance when it prevents honest self-examination. No healthcare system remains excellent simply because it was excellent in the past.
We are already seeing warning signs: rising costs, workforce shortages, increasing commercialization, growing dependence on corporate healthcare, and persistent gaps in regulation. None of these issues alone will destroy a healthcare system. Together, however, they can slowly weaken the foundations that made it strong.
The answer is not to reject investment. The answer is to regulate wisely, protect patients, strengthen public healthcare, crack down on quackery, and ensure that healthcare remains a public good rather than merely a profitable industry.
Kerala’s healthcare system did not become respected by accident. It was built through decades of public trust, dedicated professionals, and a commitment to putting people before profits. If we fail to protect those values, the decline will not be sudden. It will be gradual, almost unnoticed—until one day we realize that the system we once celebrated is no longer the system we have.
By then, rebuilding trust may be far more difficult than preserving it today.

**Overconfidence in Kerala’s healthcare reputation**, which may prevent honest discussion about current challenges.

Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

reddit.com
u/drirsh — 13 hours ago

Foreign Investment in Kerala’s Healthcare: Progress or a Warning Sign?

As a doctor, I am not against investment. Every modern healthcare system needs capital, technology, infrastructure, and innovation. Kerala’s hospitals have grown over the years because people were willing to invest in healthcare. New buildings, advanced equipment, and specialized services are important. But there is a difference between investment that strengthens healthcare and investment that slowly turns healthcare into just another business.
Kerala has long been proud of its healthcare system. For decades, we have pointed to our health indicators as proof that quality care can coexist with social responsibility. Patients trusted doctors. Doctors trusted the system. Healthcare was seen primarily as a service, not a product.
Today, however, there are signs that deserve our attention.
As large investors and corporate interests enter the healthcare sector, the focus can gradually shift from patients to profitability. This does not happen overnight. It begins quietly—with increasing treatment costs, pressure to generate revenue, aggressive expansion strategies, and healthcare becoming more expensive for ordinary families.
The concern is not that foreign investment is inherently bad. The concern is what happens when financial returns become the primary goal. Healthcare is unlike any other industry. A patient entering a hospital is not a customer shopping for a luxury product. They are often frightened, vulnerable, and dependent on the advice they receive.
At the same time, another problem is growing in plain sight. Across many parts of the country, unqualified practitioners and quacks continue to exploit gaps in regulation. While qualified doctors face increasing scrutiny, paperwork, and regulations, illegal and unsafe medical practices often continue unchecked. This creates a dangerous situation where genuine healthcare becomes more expensive while unsafe alternatives continue to thrive.
For ordinary people, the result is simple: healthcare costs keep rising. Investigations become costlier. Insurance premiums increase. Hospital bills become more difficult to understand. Families that once worried about disease now worry about how they will pay for treatment.
There is also a larger economic question. When ownership increasingly moves beyond local communities, a significant share of profits generated from healthcare may leave the state or even the country. Money paid by patients in Kerala should ideally contribute to strengthening healthcare services, training professionals, improving infrastructure, and supporting local development. If healthcare becomes primarily an investment vehicle, society must ask who truly benefits.
Perhaps the greatest danger is complacency. Kerala often takes pride in having one of the best healthcare systems in India. That pride was earned. But pride can become arrogance when it prevents honest self-examination. No healthcare system remains excellent simply because it was excellent in the past.
We are already seeing warning signs: rising costs, workforce shortages, increasing commercialization, growing dependence on corporate healthcare, and persistent gaps in regulation. None of these issues alone will destroy a healthcare system. Together, however, they can slowly weaken the foundations that made it strong.
The answer is not to reject investment. The answer is to regulate wisely, protect patients, strengthen public healthcare, crack down on quackery, and ensure that healthcare remains a public good rather than merely a profitable industry.
Kerala’s healthcare system did not become respected by accident. It was built through decades of public trust, dedicated professionals, and a commitment to putting people before profits. If we fail to protect those values, the decline will not be sudden. It will be gradual, almost unnoticed—until one day we realize that the system we once celebrated is no longer the system we have.
By then, rebuilding trust may be far more difficult than preserving it today.

**Overconfidence in Kerala’s healthcare reputation**, which may prevent honest discussion about current challenges.

Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

reddit.com
u/drirsh — 13 hours ago

Foreign Investment in Kerala’s Healthcare: Progress or a Warning Sign?

As a doctor, I am not against investment. Every modern healthcare system needs capital, technology, infrastructure, and innovation. Kerala’s hospitals have grown over the years because people were willing to invest in healthcare. New buildings, advanced equipment, and specialized services are important. But there is a difference between investment that strengthens healthcare and investment that slowly turns healthcare into just another business.
Kerala has long been proud of its healthcare system. For decades, we have pointed to our health indicators as proof that quality care can coexist with social responsibility. Patients trusted doctors. Doctors trusted the system. Healthcare was seen primarily as a service, not a product.
Today, however, there are signs that deserve our attention.
As large investors and corporate interests enter the healthcare sector, the focus can gradually shift from patients to profitability. This does not happen overnight. It begins quietly—with increasing treatment costs, pressure to generate revenue, aggressive expansion strategies, and healthcare becoming more expensive for ordinary families.
The concern is not that foreign investment is inherently bad. The concern is what happens when financial returns become the primary goal. Healthcare is unlike any other industry. A patient entering a hospital is not a customer shopping for a luxury product. They are often frightened, vulnerable, and dependent on the advice they receive.
At the same time, another problem is growing in plain sight. Across many parts of the country, unqualified practitioners and quacks continue to exploit gaps in regulation. While qualified doctors face increasing scrutiny, paperwork, and regulations, illegal and unsafe medical practices often continue unchecked. This creates a dangerous situation where genuine healthcare becomes more expensive while unsafe alternatives continue to thrive.
For ordinary people, the result is simple: healthcare costs keep rising. Investigations become costlier. Insurance premiums increase. Hospital bills become more difficult to understand. Families that once worried about disease now worry about how they will pay for treatment.
There is also a larger economic question. When ownership increasingly moves beyond local communities, a significant share of profits generated from healthcare may leave the state or even the country. Money paid by patients in Kerala should ideally contribute to strengthening healthcare services, training professionals, improving infrastructure, and supporting local development. If healthcare becomes primarily an investment vehicle, society must ask who truly benefits.
Perhaps the greatest danger is complacency. Kerala often takes pride in having one of the best healthcare systems in India. That pride was earned. But pride can become arrogance when it prevents honest self-examination. No healthcare system remains excellent simply because it was excellent in the past.
We are already seeing warning signs: rising costs, workforce shortages, increasing commercialization, growing dependence on corporate healthcare, and persistent gaps in regulation. None of these issues alone will destroy a healthcare system. Together, however, they can slowly weaken the foundations that made it strong.
The answer is not to reject investment. The answer is to regulate wisely, protect patients, strengthen public healthcare, crack down on quackery, and ensure that healthcare remains a public good rather than merely a profitable industry.
Kerala’s healthcare system did not become respected by accident. It was built through decades of public trust, dedicated professionals, and a commitment to putting people before profits. If we fail to protect those values, the decline will not be sudden. It will be gradual, almost unnoticed—until one day we realize that the system we once celebrated is no longer the system we have.
By then, rebuilding trust may be far more difficult than preserving it today.

Overconfidence in Kerala’s healthcare reputation, which may prevent honest discussion about current challenges.

Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

u/drirsh — 13 hours ago

A New Path for Indian Doctors to Pursue US Board Certification: What Has Actually Changed?

For many Indian doctors, the dream of practicing in the United States has always come with one major challenge: repeating residency training in the US, even after completing postgraduate specialization and years of clinical practice in India.
Recently, news about new pathways for internationally trained physicians has generated excitement across the medical community. However, it is important to understand exactly what has changed—and what has not.
What Is the New Development?
Traditionally, most Indian doctors wishing to become board-certified specialists in the United States had to clear the USMLE examinations, obtain ECFMG certification, secure a residency position through the Match process, and complete residency training again in the US.
Now, certain American specialty boards have started exploring alternative pathways for experienced international physicians from selected countries and institutions. These pathways aim to assess a doctor’s competence rather than automatically requiring repetition of training already completed elsewhere.
Why Is This Happening?
The United States is facing a significant physician shortage, particularly in Internal Medicine and other key specialties. At the same time, healthcare systems increasingly recognize that many international physicians have already undergone rigorous postgraduate training and gained substantial clinical experience.
This has led to an important question:
Should an experienced specialist who has already completed accredited training and managed patients independently for years be required to start over from the beginning?
The emerging answer is that competency and experience should also be considered alongside training location.
Who Can Benefit?
This is where many misconceptions arise.
The new pathways do not mean that every Indian doctor can immediately move to the US and start practicing independently.
Eligibility depends on several factors, including:
Medical specialty
Type of postgraduate training completed
Recognition of the training institution
Requirements of the relevant American specialty board
Licensing regulations of individual US states
Examination and certification requirements
Therefore, the opportunity currently applies only to specific groups of physicians who meet defined criteria.
What Has Not Changed?
Several important requirements remain in place:
Patient safety standards remain unchanged.
Licensing requirements still exist.
Board certification standards remain rigorous.
Immigration and visa regulations still apply.
Competency assessments continue to be required.
In other words, this is not a shortcut. It is an alternative pathway designed to avoid unnecessary duplication of training for suitably qualified physicians.
Why Does This Matter for Indian Doctors?
Indian medical education has produced highly skilled specialists who work in some of the world’s busiest healthcare settings. The growing willingness of American institutions to recognize international training reflects increasing confidence in global medical education standards.
For many doctors, this could mean:
Reduced need to repeat years of residency training.
Faster integration into the US healthcare workforce.
Greater international career opportunities.
Recognition of prior clinical experience and expertise.
The Bigger Picture
As medicine becomes increasingly global, healthcare systems are beginning to focus less on where a doctor trained and more on whether that doctor possesses the knowledge, skills, and professionalism required to provide safe patient care.
The recent developments do not eliminate the challenges of pursuing a medical career in the United States. However, they represent an important shift in thinking—one that acknowledges the value of experienced international physicians, including many trained in India.
For Indian doctors considering opportunities abroad, the message is clear: stay informed, verify eligibility requirements carefully, and follow official announcements from American specialty boards. The pathway remains demanding, but it may now be more flexible than it was in the past.
As physicians, we should view this not as an easy route, but as a sign that global medical training is increasingly being recognized on the basis of competence, experience, and quality rather than geography alone.

#IndianDoctors #USMLE #MedicalEducation #Healthcare #Physicians #ABIM #BoardCertification #InternationalMedicalGraduates #Medicine #DoctorLifeinUSA #MedicineinUSA

u/drirsh — 4 days ago

The Weight of the White Coat

The white coat isn't fabric. It's a question patients ask with their eyes: Will you stay? Will you understand? Will you try?
Every doctor in India carries this weight differently.
The one in the village clinic, where the power cuts out and the fridge holds vaccines worth more than his salary. The one in the city ICU, where families pace corridors hoping for a word, any word. The one teaching anatomy to students who will never know her name but will save lives with her lessons. The one in court, speaking for the voiceless, where medicine meets justice and truth is never simple. The one in the lab at midnight, chasing a number that might change everything — or nothing.
Different rooms. Same coat. Same question.
India has 1.4 billion stories, and her doctors are woven into most of them — at birth, at death, at every fragile moment between. We are not heroes. We are humans who chose a life where presence is the first prescription and listening is the oldest medicine.
So this Doctors' Day, I don't speak for myself. I speak for the doctor who missed her child's recital for an emergency surgery. For the one who held a stranger's hand as they took their last breath. For the one who cried in the parking lot where no one could see. For the one who still believes, despite everything, that one honest moment can heal what medicine alone cannot.
To every doctor who wears the coat — not for glory, but because someone, somewhere, needs you to show up:
Happy Doctors' Day.
By DR IRSHAD PALAKKAL

u/drirsh — 4 days ago

What to do if i came to know about a person practicing medicine and treating patients

Wha to do if i came to know about a person who practices medicine and treating patients and who introduces himself as a registered medical professional and treating patients and giving certificates and one person told me about that person that specific person every one used to think that he is registered doctor practices medical is not a registered medical practitioner and also he caused many problems by giving medication to normal people also some deaths caused due to his negligence and when i asked about him he denied and told me that he runs a clinic and not practices medicine now a days also he refused to show his registration details. He convinced many doctors including me and interacted many times and now his statement that he is not practicing and also he owns clinics make a suspicious also he didn’t admitted he is not a medical practitioner but still didn’t show his registration details. What to do in this scenario. Should I go legally or tell the public about the suspect

reddit.com
u/drirsh — 13 days ago

The Tea Master, The Chef, and The Doctor

By Dr IRSHAD PALAKKAL

Imagine a town with two famous experts.
One is a master tea maker. He has spent years understanding leaves, herbs, aromas, and traditional recipes passed down through generations.

The other is a chef trained in modern culinary science. He understands nutrition, food safety, chemistry, and advanced cooking techniques.

Both are respected.
Both are skilled.
Both serve different purposes.

Now imagine someone saying:
“Why don’t we train the tea master for a few months to become a chef?”
Or,
“Why don’t we teach the chef a little traditional tea-making and call him a tea master too?”
At first, it sounds practical.

But then a question arises:
Would we create two stronger professions—or two diluted ones?

This is the heart of one of India’s longest-running healthcare debates.

For decades, India has proudly preserved multiple systems of medicine—Ayurveda, Yoga, Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy, and Modern Medicine.

Each has its own philosophy, education, diagnosis, treatments, and history.

The original idea behind AYUSH was not to erase these differences. It was to preserve them and give people a choice.

*A patient seeking Ayurveda should know they are receiving Ayurveda.
*A patient seeking Homeopathy should know they are receiving Homeopathy.
*A patient seeking Modern Medicine should know they are receiving Modern Medicine.

The confusion begins when boundaries become unclear.

Several years ago, proposals for bridge courses allowing limited practice of modern medicine by practitioners of other systems triggered a nationwide debate. Supporters argued that it could help address healthcare shortages in underserved areas. Critics argued that patient choice and professional clarity could suffer if different systems were blended without full training. Eventually, the proposed bridge-course provision allowing AYUSH practitioners to practice modern medicine was removed from the National Medical Commission framework.

Interestingly, government policy has simultaneously encouraged the growth of AYUSH systems through co-location, research collaborations, and integrative healthcare models—while continuing to recognize that AYUSH and modern medicine are distinct systems. The stated goal has often been to provide patients with options under one healthcare ecosystem rather than replacing one system with another.

Perhaps the real question is not:
“Which system should win?”
But rather:
“How do we preserve the strengths of every system without blurring their identities?”
Maybe the future is not about turning Ayurvedic doctors into modern medicine doctors.
Maybe it is not about turning modern medicine doctors into Ayurvedic doctors either.
Maybe the future is about excellence within each discipline, mutual respect between systems, transparent qualifications, honest patient information, and the freedom for patients to choose the branch of medicine they trust.

After all, diversity in healthcare is valuable.
Confusion is not.

*A strong Ayurveda deserves to remain Ayurveda.
*A strong Homeopathy deserves to remain Homeopathy.
*A strong Modern Medicine deserves to remain Modern Medicine.

And patients deserve to know exactly which path they are choosing.

The purpose of medical law is not merely to regulate doctors. It is to protect informed patient choice.”

© 2026 Dr. IRSHAD PALAKKAL

reddit.com
u/drirsh — 14 days ago
▲ 1 r/DoctorsofIndia+1 crossposts

"Will I go to jail for a complication?" — BNS Section 106 and the new criminal exposure"

The Indian Penal Code's Section 304A — the old, familiar provision under which doctors were booked for causing death by negligence — no longer exists. Since July 2024, it has been The Indian Penal Code's Section 304A — the old, familiar provision under which doctors were booked for causing death by negligence — no longer exists. Since July 2024, it has been replaced by Section 106 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS). The change sounds technical, but it isn't. Under the old law, a judge could choose between a fine and imprisonment for negligence causing death. Under Section 106(1), a registered medical practitioner found criminally negligent during a procedure faces a prison term of up to two years, and the fine is mandatory in addition, not instead of jail. The discretion that judges once had to let a doctor off with a fine has effectively narrowed.
The Indian Medical Association pushed hard against this when the law was being drafted, and the Home Ministry did agree to cap the doctor-specific sentence at two years rather than the general five — but the demand to exempt registered practitioners from criminal prosecution altogether was not accepted. So the anxious question doctors keep asking — "can a genuine complication land me in a criminal trial?" — has a real answer: yes, it still can, and the bar for what counts as "gross negligence" rather than an honest misjudgment is being worked out case by case, right now, mostly in Kerala's courts.

Two recent Kerala High Court rulings show both sides of that coin. In one, a doctor who had prescribed medication over the phone to a patient he had treated before — and who later died — had the criminal case against him quashed, because the court found his actions consistent with what any competent physician would have done. In a second, decided in April 2026, the court refused to quash charges against an anaesthetist accused of skipping a mandatory pre-anaesthetic check-up, holding that this kind of lapse is prima facie gross negligence and that disputed facts about whether the check-up actually happened belong in a trial, not a quashing petition. That second doctor's plea was rejected outright — a sobering reminder that documentation, not memory, is what will speak for you years later.

And the story doesn't always end at the High Court. Just weeks ago, the Supreme Court stepped in to discharge an anaesthetist whom the Kerala High Court had refused to let off — a case where a nurse, acting on the doctor's telephoned instructions after her shift had ended, administered an injection incorrectly. The Supreme Court found the expert medical panel that had examined the case was itself defective, lacking a peer specialist competent to assess the technical issues, and called the continued prosecution an abuse of process.
 The lesson for South Indian doctors handling night calls and telephonic advice isn't that you're protected — it's that you may need to fight all the way to Delhi to prove it. 
For doctors across India, particularly those providing emergency care, telephonic guidance, ICU supervision, anaesthesia services, and night-duty consultations, these developments raise important questions about professional risk, documentation standards, and legal protection.
#"Is fear changing clinical decisions?"
#"Are emergencies adequately protected?"
#"More jail risk under BNS 106?"
What practical reforms can be introduced to reduce doctors' fear of criminal prosecution for genuine medical complications while maintaining accountability for gross negligence?
I invite doctors, anaesthetists, surgeons, lawyers, hospital administrators, and policymakers to share their perspectives.
Disclaimer: This article represents the author's personal views for academic and professional discussion. It should not be construed as legal advice. Readers should refer to the latest statutory provisions and judicial decisions or seek professional legal counsel where required.
© Dr. Irshad Palakkal, 2026.

reddit.com
u/drirsh — 19 days ago