‘Fake’ doctor was associated with the death of former Chhattisgarh speaker during surgery


Bhopal:

A fake doctor who used to work on a former speaker of Chhattisgarh-Evperation, due to which he died in Madhya Pradesh. This time, at least seven deaths are associated with it. All took place in the Mission Hospital of Damoh in the last few months. The man has been arrested.

In 2006, the death of Chhattisgarh Assembly Speaker Rajendra Prasad Shukla during surgery at a private hospital in Bilaspur raised serious questions.

The person running Scalpel was accused of cheating. After about two decades, the same name has resumed – this time in Damoh, Madhya Pradesh.

Dr. his patients Ann John is known as Camum. It is believed that a UK-Return cardiologist, a past, suspected degree and no cardiology registration turned out to be a resident of Dehradun.

Despite this, he was performing complex processes at Damoh’s Mission Hospital, including angiography and anoplasty.

Police said that his Aadhaar card says that his real name is Narendra Vikramaditya Yadav. Their merit-An MBBS from-Nahra Pradesh, followed by several suspected MDs and cardiology degrees as Darjeeling, Calcutta and Miscellaneous places as Calcutta and UK.

Yadav was hired through a placement agency and started treating heart patients under a fake identity.

According to local officials, they performed 15 operations, due to which seven patients died.

The victims include Rahasa Begum, Mangal Singh, Mercury Ahirwal, Israel Khan and Dasonda Rikwar, all died within a few hours of the procedures under the procedures conducted by them.

The gravity of this scam came to light when the families of victims like Raisa Begum and Mangal Singh came forward.

On January 12, the chest pain, Rasa, performed surgery after three days and died within hours. “As soon as my mother died, the doctors disappeared,” said his son, prophet Qureshi.

Mangal Singh, brought with gastric complaints, was also operated on the same day. His son Jitendra Singh said, “The injection he had not even gave. When we demanded the postmortem examination, the hospital insisted that it was not necessary and handed us the dead body.”

In some cases, families claim that they were not shown even the prescribed injections or medicines. In others, the hospital insisted on leaving the postmortem. Argument – “What’s the matter now? Operation is done”.

Now a case has been registered.

Abhishek Tiwari, CSP, Damoh, said, “CHMO (Chief Medical and Health Officer) Dr. MK Jain presented a report stating that Dr. Narendra John Cam, employed in the mission hospital, presented forged and fake medical documents. He said that he said that he said that he has not prepared for angles and angioplasts. Has registered a case ”.

Pushpa Khare, in -charge of Mission Hospital, said: “Dr. Narendra was appointed through an agency Evus registered with the Government of Madhya Pradesh. We had a contract with the company, under which 50 percent of his monthly salary was to be paid”.

The agency, he said, was responsible for verifying the doctor’s credibility and documents.

He said, “Dr. Narendra also snatched our portable eco machine, which was worth about 5 to 7 lakh rupees. We have filed a complaint about theft.”

2006 echoes: When a speaker dies under his knife

This is not Narendra Yadav’s first brush with controversy. In 2006, he was nominated in connection with the death of Rajendra Prasad Shukla, the speaker of Chhattisgarh Legislative Assembly, who died during a surgery at Apollo Hospital in Bilaspur.

At that time, Yadav was passed as a reputed UK-based doctor. An inquiry was then ordered, but no permanent action was taken.

Today, with the new deaths associated with them, questions are being raised: Why was they not blacklist? How was he allowed to re -practice?
Justice (retired), Anil Shukla, a family member of the late speaker, said:

“We still came to know that he was not worthy. If the system had acted then, a lot of innocent life could have been saved today”.

“My father did surgery, and I was present at that time. I suspected that when the catheter was to be put again and again. He said.

Dr. Pramod Tiwari, CMHO, Bilaspur said: “I have sent a team to investigate the matter and asked for all documents. If he was practicing without proper registration, it is a very serious matter.”

Devesh Gopal, an executive from Apollo Bilaspur, said, “This is a very old case, at the age of about 18 to 19. We will be able to provide details only after verifying the related documents. The steps taken at that time will be clear after reviewing the paperwork.”

Chief Minister Mohan Yadav said that action will be taken against all those who have been found responsible. “Nobody will be spared,” he said.


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