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Increasing violence against doctors is fuelled by frustrations at longstanding failures and discrimination in India’s health system, writes Rahat Touhid
Harish Mohammad, a doctor interning at a government general hospital in Kochi, was attacked by two men visiting a patient1 on 1 July India’s National Doctor’s Day.
“It’s everywhere you look and it’s terrifying,” Mohammad told The BMJ , “It’s heart breaking to see how things have escalated to this point, there’s no escape from it.”
In India, 63% of doctors fear violence from patients and their families, particularly in high stress situations such as in psychiatry or emergency wards and intensive care units.2 “Violence has become very common,” says Mohammad, “it’s like a daily affair.”
According to the Journal of Postgraduate Medicine , violence against doctors is on the rise in economically developing countries. In 82% of cases, the perpetrators are family members or relatives of a patient. “The pe
Using brand names to prescribe drugs should stop in the interest of public health, says KM Gopakumar, legal researcher and legal advisor on medicine access and intellectual property at Third World Network