Ankit's Post

🔹 1. Public vs Private — Healthcare or Lottery? — A patient in a government hospital waits 9 hours in OPD, then gets 5 minutes with a doctor. — In a private setup, he pays ₹1500 and is seen in 15 minutes — but is prescribed ₹5000 worth of tests. 👉 India spends only 1.2% of its GDP on healthcare — one of the lowest in the world. 👉 70% of India's healthcare is delivered by the private sector — which is out of reach for most. 🔹 2. Insurance = Paper Protection — A man with Ayushman Bharat coverage went hospital to hospital in a Tier 2 city — and was denied by all. — Why? Insurance rates are too low for private hospitals to “accept” such patients. 👉 Only 20% of hospitals in some states are empanelled under Ayushman. 👉 Many families discover their policy doesn’t cover the treatment — only after admission. 🔹 3. Hospitals Run on Numbers, Not Needs — ICU beds are pushed for even mild cases — because they generate more revenue. — Blood tests and scans are repeated just to bill insurance. 👉 In some hospitals, doctors face pressure to meet monthly revenue targets — or risk job threats. 👉 Patients = profit centers. Medicine = product. 🔹 4. Drug Access = Rich Lives, Poor Dies — ₹300 generic chemotherapy drugs exist — but patients are prescribed branded ones at ₹15,000. — Some cancer patients are forced to skip treatment entirely. 👉 Even in govt setups, 60% of drugs are “out of stock” and must be bought from private pharmacies. 👉 Essential medicines often miss the shelves, but multivitamins are always available. 🔹 5. Rural Healthcare = Ghost Infrastructure — Many PHCs (Primary Health Centres) have no doctors, no electricity, and no basic medicines. — Deliveries are still done by untrained attendants in many tribal areas. 👉 66% of India lives in rural areas, but only 27% of doctors are available there. 👉 Shortage of over 3 lakh doctors in public health system. 🔹 6. Doctors Are Victims Too — MBBS interns work 20-hour shifts, sometimes unpaid, sometimes unpaid for 6 months. — PG residents do surgeries, manage emergencies, take rounds — and still face violence from frustrated patients' families. #mbbs #medicine #medicalstudent #doctor #medical #explore

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This post was published on 01st July, 2025 by Ankit on his Instagram handle "@aktsrma (Ankit Sharma)". Ankit has total 12.7K followers on Instagram and has a total of 176 post.This post has received 3.9K Likes which are lower than the average likes that Ankit gets. Ankit receives an average engagement rate of 41.02% per post on Instagram. This post has received 15 comments which are lower than the average comments that Ankit gets. Overall the engagement rate for this post was lower than the average for the profile. #explore #mbbs #medicine #doctor #medicalstudent #medical has been used frequently in this Post.

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