Wednesday, 18 June 2025

One Night in the ER—and Other Stories from the Heart of Indian Healthcare

 There are some things you don’t forget for the rest of your life. Some good. Some painful.


This was one such night. One of my 24-hour shifts as an anesthesia resident at a busy government hospital in Delhi. Like many large public hospitals, the emergency room here was a world of its own, divided into three zones: the triage area, where junior doctors directed patients based on severity; the green zone, for less critical cases; and the yellow/red zone, for patients needing ICU care, ventilation, or immediate surgery.


We were usually posted in the red zone, but for one month during our residency, we were rotated through the green zone, managing junior staff, coordinating specialist consultations, and helping with medicolegal cases. My posting happened to fall in December, during the bitter Delhi winter. This was one of my first overnight duties for that month.


The ER was its usual chaotic mix—patients with fever, trauma, accidents, and even police bringing in the accused for medical examination before arrest. But sometime after midnight, the crowd thinned, and I decided to take the first rest shift while my colleague covered.


Just half an hour into that break, I saw a group of anxious people rush in, one of them clutching a blanket tightly. I went out to meet them. They handed me a referral letter from a government hospital, nearly 200 km away, stating that their premature newborn urgently needed NICU care, which was not available there.


I opened the blanket. The baby was breathing rapidly, visibly cyanosed, turning blue.


For some context, in the government system, ICU beds are a rare commodity, and NICU beds are rarer still. There are often no available beds unless someone recovers or dies at precisely the moment a new patient arrives. Access is also often influenced by connections: someone “higher up” might get a bed faster, regardless of clinical severity.


I immediately called our outborn NICU, which handles babies born outside our hospital. The answer was predictable: no beds. I tried the inborn NICU too, even though they don’t usually accept external referrals but again, no luck.


My heart sank. I asked my junior to seat the baby’s father while I mentally prepared myself to deliver the bad news.


He sat down across from me, a daily wage worker, worn out by the day, but still holding onto hope. I told him gently that we had no beds. His face dropped into a look of quiet devastation.


He began explaining that they had already gone to all five major tertiary hospitals in Delhi, all of whom turned them away. This hospital was their last hope, and even that was now slipping.


I had no answers. The only thing I could do was ask him to go to the NICU and plead directly with the staff, something I wasn’t supposed to encourage. Later, I got a call from the pediatric team, frustrated that I had sent the family their way, knowing full well they would have to refuse too.


The family left, heading back to their village hospital, praying that minimal care would somehow be enough. I wasn’t too optimistic about the baby.


A police constable posted in the ER came up to me as I stood quietly afterward.


“Sir, this is normal here. Happens every night,” he said. “Ambulance drivers do a full round of the big hospitals, and only when all fails, or the patient dies do they land here. Don’t take it to heart. Come, let’s have some tea.”


I did continue with my work. But that night left an impression that hasn’t faded. It was my first intimate encounter with the fragility of healthcare access for India’s common man.


Just a few weeks later, I witnessed the exact opposite.


One night, around midnight, a staff member of a prominent minister was brought in with signs of a stroke. The patient, like all others, waited for initial evaluation and scan. Nothing urgent. No VIP treatment. That is, until they informed the Health Minister himself.


He called the emergency physician on duty, demanding immediate neurosurgical care. The answer came back: “They’re all busy.”


Then, without warning, the minister arrived in person at the ER.


Within minutes, the atmosphere shifted. Neurosurgery residents—on duty and off—appeared in the red zone. A consultant neurosurgeon showed up shortly after. The scans were done, the surgery prepped, and by 1 AM, the patient was being operated on.


I stood there, watching how the machinery of the hospital—usually slow, reluctant, and unresponsive—shifted into perfect sync. One powerful person’s presence, and the system that fails so many, suddenly worked like clockwork.


A neurosurgery resident once confided to me, “For the average stroke patient, it depends more on luck than logistics. If the OT’s free, the scan room isn’t occupied, and the resident on duty is not exhausted—we go ahead. Otherwise, they wait.”


For this VIP patient, there was no waiting.


Later, while working as a senior resident in the ICU of another government hospital, I saw a darker side of this inequality.


This hospital served patients from a backward area, people with almost no resources. One morning, after admitting a group of patients overnight; septic shock, hepatic encephalopathy, renal failure; I was accompanying the consultant on rounds.


Instead of discussing how to save these patients, the consultant began casually discussing what to write on their death certificates.


“Septicemia. MODS. Hepatorenal syndrome,” he rattled off. “This one should go tonight. That one by morning.”


There was no urgency, no hope, no empathy. Just cold, administrative finality, as though poverty stripped the patient of worth. It wasn’t just clinical realism—it was apathy. It felt as though their survival didn’t matter, and I was expected to accept that.


In another incident at the same hospital, a stroke patient sent by a local politician was brought in. The patient’s attendants were visibly uncomfortable with the care standards. Despite the cost, they took the patient back to a private hospital, where they had previously received treatment but had avoided this time due to rising fees.


It struck me how even influence wasn’t enough to make people stay—that the gap between public and private healthcare was so vast that the people had no real options, and even the moderately connected felt abandoned.


Not all stories end in despair.


Once, a pregnant woman in her second trimester was referred from another hospital after a fall from height. She was intubated, with a poor GCS, and needed urgent ICU care. That hospital lacked both CT and ICU facilities.


A call was made to our emergency physician—not to confirm admission, but just to ask if a bed might be available. Somewhere along the way, that inquiry was mistaken for approval. The woman was transported and directly brought into the ICU, without formal paperwork. The nurses accepted her, assuming the documents would follow.


When the ICU consultant found out, he was shocked that no surgeon had been informed, no formal consent, no case summary.


But once the facts were clear and her critical state was evident, no one asked to send her back. Everyone just did their job. She was stabilized, scanned, and monitored. Within days, she improved. She was extubated, regained consciousness, and was discharged home a few weeks later—with her baby still alive inside her.


It was a case of protocol failure that saved a life. And to me, it felt like more than chance. It was mercy, quietly delivered.


Healthcare in India is improving in many ways. More AIIMS institutions, more PG seats, more infrastructure projects. But these don’t always translate to last-mile care for the poor.


The reality is: India is only as developed as the services available to its poorest citizen.


We don’t need a medical college in every Taluk. But we do need better-equipped secondary care centers, staffed with people who care, not just people who report.


And as doctors, citizens, and fellow human beings, we must ask: What kind of system are we building if survival depends more on luck and influence than medicine and compassion?


Until that changes, we owe it to each other to be kind, to be attentive, and to speak up when the system forgets to care.

The Silent Miracle Within: A Reflection on the Human Heart

 Have you ever paused to truly reflect on your heart—not in the poetic sense alone, but as the remarkable organ quietly sustaining your life, beat after beat, moment after moment?


The heart is more than a four chambered muscular pump. It is a masterpiece of biological engineering, functioning with breathtaking precision. Every heartbeat originates from a specialized group of cells, the sinoatrial (SA) node, often called the heart’s natural pacemaker. These cells possess automaticity, the innate ability to generate electrical impulses without any external command. This remarkable trait is due to the regulated movement of sodium (Na⁺) and potassium (K⁺) ions across the cell membranes, creating the electrical action potentials that spark each beat.


From the SA node, the electrical signal travels through the atria, prompting them to contract. It then pauses momentarily at the atrioventricular (AV) node, allowing the ventricles time to fill. The signal continues its journey down the bundle of His, branches into the right and left bundle branches, and finally reaches the Purkinje fibers, causing the ventricles to contract in perfect synchrony.


All of this happens in under a second. Every. Single. Time.


The heart performs this cycle approximately 100,000 times a day, pushing nearly 6,000 liters of blood through a vast network of vessels stretching over 100,000 kilometers. And it does so without conscious effort; day and night, in wakefulness and in sleep, increasing or decreasing as our body needs. 


Yet, the system is delicate. A disruption in the conduction pathway, even involving just a few misfiring cells or an altered ionic current, can lead to serious arrhythmias. Conditions like atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, or heart block may emerge, sometimes with life-threatening consequences. The balance is so fine that a slight deviation can determine the line between life and death.


How, then, can such intricate precision exist by chance?


One cannot study the heart and not feel a sense of awe. The orchestration of electrical impulses, the harmony of ion channels, the backup systems built into its structure; each component testifies to an intelligence far beyond human comprehension.


Subhanallah, How perfect Allah, Our Creator, is.


Under His control is the automaticity of the heart and how long it should last. Once it passes the decreed time, no technology can ever bring it back. 


It is a silent miracle beating within our chest. Every contraction is a whisper of mercy. Every beat, a reminder of the unseen grace that sustains us.


As the Qur’an beautifully states:

“We will show them Our signs in the horizons and within themselves until it becomes clear to them that it is the truth. But is it not sufficient concerning your Lord that He is, over all things, a Witness? i.e., never absent, always seeing and having complete knowledge of everything within His dominion.” (Surah Fussilat 41:53)

And is the heart not one of the greatest of these signs?


So pause.

Listen.

Feel.


That rhythm within you is more than physiology.

It is a gift, a sign, a reminder to be grateful before it stops forever.


“And it is He who produced for you hearing and vision and hearts [i.e., intellect]; little are you grateful.” (Surah Al Mu’minun 23:78)

Friday, 3 March 2023

My Fidus Achates

It was one of the early days of my Anesthesia PG life in Delhi. I had gotten a roommate from Pondicherry before reaching Delhi, courtesy WhatsApp. It was the time we were planning to shift out of our first accommodation when we understood there were far more better options. We did find a flat, but we needed a third person to afford it. Since we didn’t have many friends in this new place, we put up a request for a roommate in our WhatsApp group. We got a quick response from a person belonging to UP. We were a little apprehensive, because both of us were from South India and let’s face it, there’s this stereotype about people from North India and vice versa. Since there was no other response, we thought we’ll come to a decision once we meet him. Since, relatively I was better at Hindi than my roommate, I called him up and told to meet us at Karol Bagh so that we can discuss and proceed further. So, one sunny dusty afternoon in the summer of 2018, near Pooja park in Karol Bagh, we met this person. First time I saw him, a no nonsense smart quick guy with a big bag. Talking fast pure Hindi. About the different houses he had seen nearby and why he couldn’t settle on one. Pretty confidently he started taking us around searching a few more places. We even whispered among ourselves if he was also a broker on the side because of his familiarity with the place. Finally, we decided on a place. He spoke with the owner and the broker and brought our upfront costs down less than what we had agreed upon. We were thinking wow, this guy is really good at this. That was the beginning of an unexpected and unlikely friendship which over my stay in Delhi of almost 5 years evolved into an unspoken bond of knowing there’s always someone who is unconditionally dependable. 


It was unlikely and unexpected because what I had usually seen in Delhi is the formation of sub communities related to your native place or language or religion or drinking habits and mostly being within that. And as for us, we were from two totally different parts of our country, different backgrounds, different languages and different religions. Only thing in common was perhaps our open minds to accept one another and that we are both teetotallers. 


For our first year, we were three people from three different places, speaking three different languages with three different beliefs, living, studying and working together. That was until we had to change living arrangements because my family had come to live with me. Then, although we were living apart, our bond remained. 


Especially during and after what we had to endure of the Covid waves. Although in my specialty we do see people dying during our duty, seeing a lot of it while remaining helpless despite having a lot of gadgets and wondering if I would be next is something that changes your perspective in life. However, time has shown that people do tend to forget. 


There are countless instances of his support, without any pretences or expectations, over the years for which words of gratitude won’t do justice.


It’s been a month since I left Delhi and frankly I’m happy overall that I’m back in my state, but one of the few things I miss is my friend. Although tech has decreased the distance between people, and there are no real goodbyes in this age of connectivity, there is that feeling of not being near. I only pray that the Almighty give him a worthy life partner, bless us and guide us all to the Straight path.


Bhai, aaj tumhara yaad aaya…

Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Is this the India we dream about?

We as Indians, everyone knows are varied like the spectrum of visible light. But in the end we are Indians. The point is that even though this is easy to write and think about or maybe even imagine for other countries, the reality is that even after more than 60 years of Independence, this feeling of oneness has not completely sunken into our minds. I doubt if it ever will. I can see it in my daily life where the unskilled labour force is being increasing occupied by odishans, the interactions with them is comparable to that which would be given to a foreigner. Or be in our prejudices; bengalis are machlis, punjabis are dumb singhs, keralites are mallus, tamilians are pandis, etc..
I would like ask how can we tell we are patriotic and proud Indians when we don't even love and respect one another, when we don't have the patience to accept our fellow countrymen??
Is this what our leaders dreamt of?