White Coats, Dark Deals: The Syndicate Behind Indian Hospitals
The White Coat Illusion: How Doctors Gain Trust, Betray It and the Faith Indians Have in them
Many people in India show immediate respect for a doctor more than for anyone else. As with a priest’s clothes or a judge’s gavel, the white coat represents authority, intelligence and a sense of the sacred. Because of tradition and trauma, the doctor is memorably respected as more than a professional; many see them as a healer, a hero and even someone close to a god in critical moments.
Still such deep respect can make us dangerously naive and trusting. The way the white coat looks — pure and professional — lets doctors get away with unethical choices, act for profit and sometimes commit serious crimes. Because a stethoscope is considered a medical symbol, many mistakenly see anyone using it as kind, skilled and untouched by corruption.
Having Trust in Something that Doesn’t Work
Indian patients in semi-urban and rural areas rarely challenge what a doctor tells them about their health. The typical Indian, regardless of occupation, usually has ignorance of health facts and cannot take part in shared health decisions. Because doctors often know much more than their patients, they usually take advantage of it. Doctors usually do not explain their recommendations and it is often advised against listening to other medical opinions.
So, private hospitals now operate with an unneeded rise in operations, costly testing and unethical treatment procedures. Some cardiologists find that angioplasty is recommended, sometimes instead of lifestyle changes, for those experiencing stable angina. Instead of allowing natural childbirths, many gynaecologists urge doctors to perform caesareans because they are easier and more profitable. The white coat makes the doctor’s words seem serious and the patient trusts them enough to go along.
According to a study released by Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research in 2020, nearly half of the surgical procedures carried out in Indian tier-2 cities had no clear medical reason recorded for the patient. In top city hospitals, staff admittedly say all doctors have monthly testing, surgery and ICU goals to meet.
How the Commission on Health Hazards Built a Reserved Pool of Physicians
The problem is made worse by how the commission system is used. Because of kickbacks, many doctors send their patients to particular clinical centres, specialist doctors or hospitals that pay them. Hospitals refer to "cut practise" in their hallways and this term covers a wide range of referrals, kickbacks and plainly stated monetary rewards.
A sting organised by Cobra in 2019 called “Operation White Coat” demonstrated that 40 major private hospitals and doctors in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata were happy to get up to 40% as bribes for sending patients to labs, radiology centres or for having MRIs and CT scans. Even respected specialists may be involved in this in a way that puts patient care far behind making money.
Pharmaceutical teams are also joining the trend. Giving doctors free holidays, vehicles, technological gadgets and presents is a common way for medical reps to secure agreements for their company’s brand. The patient, as usual, is unaware. They notice the doctor’s coat, grab their medicine and put their confidence in what the doctor advises. Instead, what they consume is just a business operation.
Forged Coats: Fake Doctors Becoming a Serious Problem
Even if the White Coat Illusion didn’t bother you before, it’s especially troubling since a lot of white coats in India are fake.
Entire gangs supply made-up MBBS documents and certificates for fake nurses and they are operating in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and West Bengal. Last year, the Delhi Police caught a group operating with more than 300 fake doctors in different clinics and hospitals in the National Capital Region.
They were providing service such as ultrasounds, abortions and simple surgeries, but none of them were adequately trained. An average person only knew these people by their appearance. They were all wearing white coats. They used stethoscopes. They had framed degrees up on their walls and verifying those in the country where records are not digital was no small task.
It’s not just roadside clinics that engage in this practise. Several facilities that treat disadvantaged populations use fake or unqualified doctors to keep expenses low which few patients question. A white coat is something that hides us, rather than proves our training.
Media and Cinema: The Doctor Is Like a God
A big part of what a childhood fantasy involves is being taught by culture. Long ago, Indian movies and television shows tended to show doctors as heroic champions. These movies picture the ethical and oftentimes, suffering, almost godlike doctor. During emergencies like the pandemic or a natural catastrophe, news programmes routinely call doctors heroes and refer to them using titles such as “frontline workers.”
Because we are so in awe of them, it’s hard to point out their flaws. Most of the time, whistle-blowers in health care are socially excluded by their colleagues. Often, anyone who disagrees with a doctor’s decision receives defamation threats. In the past, the Medical Council of India (now suspended and replaced) tried to protect guilty doctors by delaying things in complex ways.
Patient Injuries and the Falling Need for Accountability
Patients suffer the most from the White Coat Illusion. We are affected by it financially, emotionally and physically. Any extra operation causes the patient trauma. All the families affected by medical errors are left devastated. Drugs developed to make profit can have side effects that last a long time. Victims of medical negligence are often confused about the first steps to take. Going to the Law Courts is not affordable, moving slowly and is hardest for normal patients.
Many are convinced by this false sense of justice and don’t even recognise when they’ve been shortchanged. Rather than criticising the surgeon, families tend to say that failure was bad luck or something beyond anyone’s control. Some people in rural or poor urban neighbourhoods often get buried in debt every time their doctors advise a procedure that wasn’t really called for.
Shattering the Illusion: A Public Awakening
A run-of-the-mill reaction won’t break the White Coat Illusion — we need to transform the culture. Doctors should learn medical ethics with the same seriousness they learn anatomy. We should measure and reward doctors for how well they achieve outcomes, not for how much money they generate. Patients should be given the means to learn, asked to question everything, request second opinions and push against authority if it’s needed.
It is important for media to stop honoring doctors like demi-gods and, instead, share real reports about wrongdoing and corruption. Authorities should ensure QR-coded, publicly provable degrees, remove and sternly warn against fraudulent universities and enable access to doctor and medical licence records. It is most important that doctors themselves begin the process, since they are the only ones who can clean their own clothing.
As long as it passes that test, the illusion of cocaine is white, pure and deadly.
This patient testimony is one of many based on what has occurred in real life, as found in records, news and accounts from whistle-blowers. It reflects how huge distress, turning-point failures and mental scars are experienced by Indian patients from being under the White Coat Illusion.
Testimony: "My Father Didn't Die—He Was Billed to Death"
Name: Ramesh
Iyer
Location: Thane, Maharashtra
Age at the time: 32
Year: 2021
Relation to Patient: Son
The doctors informed me that my father needed to have bypass surgery immediately. He was age 66 and suffered from diabetes with occasional chest pain. We quickly took him to Thane’s best private hospital. Angiography was performed and the surgeon told me it required surgery — said it was urgent. I was scared to death. The doctor looked clean and confident, talked decisively and urged us to use every second wisely.
We agreed. We weren’t allowed to return home either. The very night of my mother’s accident, my father was taken into surgery.
I wasn’t convinced by what they said. They made us sign before we could think about it. Prices kept going up. The money required was ₹3 lakh, then became ₹5 lakh. From there on, it went up to ₹8.5 lakh. ICU charges. Ventilator hours. Manoeuvres for preventing and addressing disease and infection following surgery. After two weeks passed, my father had died and we owed ₹12 lakh.
We didn’t know he had such a serious blockage that could have been lessened with lifestyle changes and medication. No one brought up any other solutions. Later on, we took the reports to a second cardiologist, a friend I have at a government hospital. He was shocked. He explained, 'We didn’t have to use surgery here. He wasn’t even considered at risk for coronavirus.
I couldn’t handle it. He didn’t lose his life to a heart disease. The reason he died was that a hospital looked at our middle-class family and our insurance and began seeing us in terms of revenue.
After his death, our bill still included charges for an extra three days. ICU medicines. Doctor consultations. The doctors wrote 'oxygen therapy – ₹9,800' on the form, despite saying he was dead that same morning.
We attempted to make a complaint. The hospital told us that we had given all of our consent. The medical board advised us to visit consumer court. Six or seven years was the timeline given by lawyers, they said. My daughter is three years old. I won’t be able to fight for much longer.
We checked out, had him cremated and went home.
I don’t worry about heart disease anymore. I have a lot of fear about going to a hospital."
This story shares what many in India have been through. It isn’t only about doctors over distancing patients, but also about playing on the patient’s trust to influence their feelings. Many of these stories are not told because of complicated paperwork, a sense of shame or because survivors are just tired. Few patients ever recognise the unfair treatment they receive and those who are unable to react strong.
The Doctor-Mafia Nexus: Healing as a Business Model
Few phrases catch our attention like the pairing of Doctor and Mafia. Even in India’s healthcare system which often seems confusing, inequality Studies is a serious problem. It includes a dark system where doctors, healthcare administrators, medical equipment companies and even groups designing fake education schemes work closely — not to help patients, but to benefit financially from sickness.
Something else is going on besides a couple of isolated incidents. It is based on an industry of non-ethical teamwork, motivated by incentives, power and the absolute faith people have in their doctors.
How the Nexus Runs and Its Functions
Central to this connection is the common practice of cut — where doctors typically are given a fixed amount (the cut) to refer patients to particular hospitals, labs or pharmacies. The amount you can save varies, from 10% for blood tests to 40% for MRIs or CT scans and 60% for surgeries or hospital admissions, according to the network involved. As a result, patients are treated as money and diseases help create profits.
Doctors in these chains get incentives for accomplishing monthly goals related to how much the hospital makes, not how much care they offer patients. The quality of a neurosurgeon’s work may be measured by the number of expensive procedures they handle instead of their surgical outcomes. Employees who don’t meet expectations may be offered less money, denied moves up the ladder or kept outside the main group.
They also smooth the system by making additional payments. In return for recommending brand-name drugs, medical practitioners receive everything from envelopes of cash and holidays to luxury purchases and investments in real estate. The Lancet Regional Health’s 2023 report found that in India, decision-making on non-generics is directed mostly by lobbyists and less by the need for good medical care.
A good example is the Rajasthan Surgery Scam.
In the same year, authorities discovered in Rajasthan that patients without cataracts or hernias were still having surgeries under government schemes, including Ayushman Bharat. Every operation on a patient brought a doctor a commission and the hospitals padded their bills to get more money from the government.
Those villagers unable to read or write were usually left dealing with issues, infections or disabilities because of "free healthcare." Investigators reported that surgeries were logged for patients who did not have them, equipment was reused and some records were changed.
How companies in the Medical Equipment Mafia make money by buying supplies.
A further area of the nexus relates to the purchase and supply of medical equipment. Should a hospital require an MRI unit, a ventilator, a dialysis machine or even basic tools for surgery, those offers are manipulated to favour suppliers making kickbacks to doctors or managers. You end up spending more on these devices without getting good quality.
Recently, an investigative audit conducted in Karnataka revealed that the hospital bought ventilators that should have cost only ₹10 lakh yet paid ₹22 lakh for them. The situation got even worse since 60% of the available ventilators broke, as relatives of hospital administrators used fake contracts to service them.
Moreover, the practise takes money from taxpayers and threatens those who depend on the equipment for survival.
How the Pharmaceutical Industry Is Rewarding Collusion
In 2020, AIDAN noted that doctors in major and second-largest cities were charging patients over ₹2,000 for medicine per visit, while only ₹300–₹400 generics were needed. The medicines given were chosen based on the doctor’s rewards from drug companies, not what the patient needed.
Actually, this practice can result in much more damage than you think. Excessive use of antimicrobial and painkillers plays a part in drug resistance, harm to major organs and on rare occasions, the passing of a patient. Pharma and doctors remain connected because their funding depends on it.
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The Beginning of Corruption Lies in Medical Education
Medical colleges are where the nexus first begins, not in hospitals. In Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh, medical seats are up for sale for ₹60 lakh to ₹1.2 crore, frequently to students who have low scores on entrance tests, have wealthier parents and have no desire to excel.
After finishing their programmes, what these students care about most is recovering investment. They start treating their jobs as businesses right away.
Last year, the National Medical Commission flagged more than 150 medical institutions due to their failure to meet teaching requirements, fraudulent internships and the use of fake professors. At the same time, a lot of those businesses found ways to run despite political or legal barriers.
Many of them “graduate” to work at rural clinics, hospitals and even intensive care units with little real preparation, yet control over patients’ lives.
The Failing Solution: Why No One Is Able to Stop It
Why is it that this structure which resembles the mafia, has never been overcome?
The powerful have kept it in place. Senior doctors are part of government health boards. People who run many hospitals are often behind political parties’ funding. Drug companies back initiatives set up by the government. Bureaucrats commonly count on these groups to look after them personally, forming an unstated relationship where each helps the other.
It’s common for people who raise concerns to be threatened, lose their jobs or face worse outcomes. Dr. Kafeel Khan was gaoled with the National Security Act in 2019, even though he had already been cleared by an internal investigation into the same oxygen shortages that killed 60 children in a Gorakhpur hospital. What he was really charged with? Shaming the state by speaking honestly.
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Knowing Health: The Nation’s Tragedy
The result of this combination is that care becomes a marketable product. It’s more about money-making than patient treatment for the doctor now. Formerly, the hospital was a safe place, but now it acts as a centre for charging patients. What matters to the system now is how much the patient can pay, not who the patient is.
India’s healthcare issue isn’t limited to missing resources or facilities. It’s centred around a lack of trust. If medicine is turned into a financial business, its fundamental purpose is put on the market.
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