Medical practice in Nepal

When a patient in Nepal visits a hospital. The practice of subjecting the patient to a series of examinations using a variety of diagnostic tools (CT scan, ultrasound, etc.) has become standard procedure for the medical staff.

And after all these wallet breaking medical bills surmounted on the patient’s head the conclusion of diagnosis and the treatment is still not proper.

This goes to clearly show the medical trainings and experience of the medical staffs are in poor conditions, resulting in inefficient medical access to the people of Nepal.

This notion is furthermore true, due to the fact that the medical industry has transitioned from being an institution focused only on curing individuals of their illnesses and relieving them of their suffering to being run more like a business entity and profiting making private corporation.

If the healthcare sector had been run by a centralized administration, in which medical professionals like doctors and nurses were given salaries sufficient to cover their expenses while also allowing for some savings, the industry would be in a much better position today.

A situation in which physicians did not get commissions but were instead offered discounts and subsidies from the national administration.
This strategy would instantly begin to result in economic medical expenditures for the millions of individuals who are denied of adequate medical treatment.
[Case in point:]

Author: Thoughtmonger

Story of my Life - Thoughtmonger

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