Some Days, It’s Not the Surgery That Exhausts Me — It’s the Suspicion You walk into an OPD room, wearing your white coat, decades of experience behind you. But the patient sitting across from you isn’t just carrying test reports. They’re carrying fear. Not of the diagnosis—of the system. “Doctor, I just read about that scam…” “How do I know I can trust you?” “Are kidneys really sold in India?” And you can’t blame them. Because the truth is, the headlines are real. There have been scandals. There have been doctors who betrayed their oath. And those stories go viral—fast. But what doesn’t go viral is everything that happens in silence, off-camera, every single day. Here’s What I Want You to Know I’ve been performing kidney transplants for over a decade. I’ve worked with patients from India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Morocco. I’ve sat with families who couldn’t speak the language but still trusted me with their loved one’s life. And every single time, my only goal has been to protect that trust like it’s part of the procedure. Because for me, it is. Transparency Is Not Just a Buzzword. It’s a Surgical Standard. Every kidney transplant I do is: Audited Documented Legally cleared through national authorization committees And most importantly — explained in full detail to the patient and donor families No shortcuts. No under-the-table arrangements. No decisions made in the shadows. We don’t match kidneys—we match trust with accountability. But Here’s the Hardest Part When one scandal …
Some Days, It’s Not the Surgery That Exhausts Me — It’s the Suspicion
You walk into an OPD room, wearing your white coat, decades of experience behind you.
But the patient sitting across from you isn’t just carrying test reports.
They’re carrying fear. Not of the diagnosis—of the system.
“Doctor, I just read about that scam…”
“How do I know I can trust you?”
“Are kidneys really sold in India?”
And you can’t blame them.
Because the truth is, the headlines are real.
There have been scandals. There have been doctors who betrayed their oath.
And those stories go viral—fast.
But what doesn’t go viral is everything that happens in silence, off-camera, every single day.
Here’s What I Want You to Know
I’ve been performing kidney transplants for over a decade.
I’ve worked with patients from India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Morocco.
I’ve sat with families who couldn’t speak the language but still trusted me with their loved one’s life.
And every single time, my only goal has been to protect that trust like it’s part of the procedure.
Because for me, it is.
Transparency Is Not Just a Buzzword. It’s a Surgical Standard.
Every kidney transplant I do is:
Audited
Documented
Legally cleared through national authorization committees
And most importantly — explained in full detail to the patient and donor families
No shortcuts.
No under-the-table arrangements.
No decisions made in the shadows.
We don’t match kidneys—we match trust with accountability.
But Here’s the Hardest Part
When one scandal hits the news, it doesn’t just take down the people involved.
It casts a long shadow over the thousands of honest surgeons who still show up, still do the work, still believe that medicine is more than a business.
It makes patients second-guess even the good guys.
And it makes doctors like me work twice as hard—not just to treat—but to prove we’re not what the system sometimes makes us look like.
That’s why I speak up.
That’s why I write.
Because silence only helps the guilty. And I have no intention of being lumped in with them.
If You’ve Been Scared by What You’ve Read Online, You’re Not Alone
But fear shouldn’t stop you from getting the help you need.
It should fuel better conversations.
Better choices.
Better laws.
And better doctors who welcome your questions, not deflect them.
I’ve built my practice on those questions.
And I’ll keep answering them—whether or not they trend on Google.
Let’s Rewrite the Narrative Together
The kidney transplant ecosystem in India isn’t broken.
It’s evolving.
With more oversight, better laws, and yes—surgeons who are willing to hold themselves to a higher standard, even when no one’s watching.
That’s the standard I operate with.
That’s the team I train.
That’s the kind of care I want my own family to receive.
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