@jpsin1 Kyu prajap uncle, jo banda ±20 saal pehle nikal chuka haii , uske liye ye janna compulsory hai ????? Without this he can't be a doctor ???
Us sisab se ho mai Dr. BC roy ho gya 😔😔😔
Spoke to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio this evening. I reiterated India’s strong protest at the attacks by the US Navy in the Gulf that killed three Indian mariners. Such lethal actions against commercial shipping are not justified.
@Oye_Jahazi@DrAditya2935 Yes to be this kind of robber everyone has to study for over 10+
If you're confident then you can appoint another medico with all the reports and prescribes and FILE a complaint
THE MEDICINES YOU GET IN BENGAL'S GOVERNMENT HOSPITALS — A THREAD YOU NEED TO READ
What has come out in the last two years should make every citizen of this state angry.
Let me start from the top.
There's a body called WBMSCL — West Bengal Medical Services Corporation Limited. It's the state government's own company, responsible for buying medicines and equipment for all government hospitals. The process is supposed to be clean: vendors apply, their technical capability is evaluated first, and only qualified ones move to financial bidding. Lowest qualified bid wins. Simple. Transparent.
Except it wasn't.
— R.G. KAR: WHERE THE ROT WAS EXPOSED —
When the Calcutta High Court ordered the CBI to investigate financial irregularities at R.G. Kar Medical College, what they found was staggering.
Former principal Dr. Sandip Ghosh had been running the procurement like a personal business. The CBI discovered that the mandatory technical evaluation of medicine vendors — the step that ensures you're buying from someone competent — was simply skipped. Repeatedly. Systematically. Vendors with no relevant capability were handed contracts just because they quoted the cheapest price.
Cheapest price. Cheapest medicines. Given to the poorest patients.
Doctors had flagged the terrible quality of these medicines directly to the administration. They were ignored.
The CBI arrested Ghosh in September 2024 along with his personal security guard and two vendors — Biplab Sinha and Suman Hazra. The ED followed, tracing the money trail, raiding multiple locations including Ghosh's properties, a medical shop on Camac Street, and associates' homes. By February 2026, the ED filed its chargesheet naming Ghosh, both vendors, and Hazra Medical (the supply agency) under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act.
The CBI chargesheet noted a massive, unexplained surge in Ghosh's assets after he became principal.
Procurement committee members told the CBI on video record that Ghosh forced them to sign documents and overruled their objections.
This wasn't negligence. This was a system designed to extract money at the cost of patient lives.
— THE SALINE THAT KILLED MOTHERS —
January 2025. Midnapore Medical College.
A young woman delivered her baby and was given a routine post-operative saline drip — Ringer's Lactate solution. She died. Four other new mothers became critically ill. Three had to be emergency-transferred to SSKM in Kolkata. Days later, a newborn died too.
The saline came from Paschim Banga Pharmaceuticals, a Siliguri-based company.
Here's where it gets infuriating: this was not a surprise. The same company's products had already been linked to four maternal deaths at Ballari district hospital in Karnataka months earlier. Karnataka banned them. The Drugs Controller General was asked to reassess their certification. The West Bengal government itself placed them under scrutiny in December 2024.
And yet — their saline was still on the shelves of Bengal's government hospitals in January 2025. Still being injected into new mothers.
It took deaths on Bengal's own soil for the state to finally issue a stop-use order. Doctors who had raised alarms years earlier — going back to 2015 — had been silenced with show-cause notices and transfers.
Let that sink in. The doctor who complained was punished. The company that supplied poison continued.
— THE FAKE DRUG EPIDEMIC —
As if this wasn't enough, in 2025, drug control authorities conducted raids across West Bengal and seized spurious medicines worth over ₹7 crore. Forty-four types of substandard drugs were found circulating — some carrying forged QR codes of reputed pharmaceutical companies. Fake Human Albumin ampules (used for critically ill patients) were found in a Kolkata nursing home. The supply chain was traced to distributors in Bihar operating through local agencies.
Counterfeit life-saving drugs. In hospitals. Being given to patients who trusted the system with their lives.
— THE PATTERN —
Step back and look at all of this together:
→ Technical evaluation bypassed to favour chosen vendors
→ Substandard and counterfeit medicines entering the supply chain
→ Known dangerous suppliers continuing to operate despite red flags
→ Doctors who raise concerns being transferred or show-caused
→ Unexplained wealth accumulation by those controlling procurement
→ Action taken only after deaths make headlines
This is not one bad apple. This is a procurement ecosystem where patient safety is the last priority and money is the first.
The people who suffer? The daily wage worker whose wife delivers at the government hospital because they can't afford a private one. The elderly patient in the general ward. The child in the pediatric ICU. They don't get to choose which saline goes into their veins.
Share this if you believe public health is not for sale.
[Sources: CBI & ED chargesheets in R.G. Kar case, The Wire, Deccan Herald, News on AIR, ETV Bharat, CDSCO seizure reports, Calcutta High Court proceedings]
#WestBengal #PublicHealth #RGKar #PatientSafety #MedicineProcurement #Healthcare
Instead of sealing Education Ministry office they are sealing coaching centre of a man who literally provided education to countless poor d and opened hospital of standard that the Bihar govt can’t match ever !
Be it education or health ministry . Both are down the gutter !