? DISCLAIMER
The following article discusses a viral video containing disturbing footage of physical assault and violence inside a clinic. The events described are based on viral footage and social media accounts. All actions mentioned are alleged until proven otherwise in a court of law. This report is published strictly for journalistic and public awareness purposes.
The Prescription You Aren’t Allowed to Read: Deoria’s Medical Mafia Exposed
You go to a doctor. You pay the consultation fee. You trust them with your body. The doctor scribbles something completely unreadable on a piece of paper. You ask a very basic, fundamental question: “Doctor, what are the generic names of these medicines?” In a civilized society, you get an answer.
In Deoria, Uttar Pradesh, you allegedly get a fist to the face. Right now, a highly disturbing video is exploding across social media. It exposes the inside of the Dr. Deepti Tiwari Skin Care Center in Saket Nagar, Deoria. What starts as a patient’s family simply asking for the names of their prescribed medicines rapidly degenerates into sheer hooliganism.
Allegedly, the clinic staff refuses to answer. The doctor refuses to answer. And then, the doctor’s husband steps in, turning the clinic into a makeshift wrestling ring and physically assaulting the patient’s family. So, what exactly was the dark secret hiding in that prescription pad? Let’s talk about the Great Indian Medical Nexus.
The Captive Pharmacy and the 50% Cut
If you have ever been sick in India, you know the drill. You take a prescription to your local chemist, and they shake their head. “Yeh toh yahan nahi milegi bhaiya, doctor sahab ke neeche wale medical store par hi milegi.” (You won’t find this here; you have to buy it from the store right under the doctor’s clinic).
This is not a coincidence. This is a highly orchestrated, multi-crore racket. Medical representatives from pharmaceutical companies allegedly frequent these clinics, “dumping” specific, obscure brands of medicines. The deal is simple: the doctor writes only this brand name instead of the generic salt. In return, the doctor is assured a massive commission. In some exceptional cases, this cut goes as high as 50%.
Because these specific brands are not stocked by regular chemists, a “captive pharmacy” thrives. The chemist is often located in the exact same building, right next door, or directly downstairs. The clinic feeds the pharmacy, the pharmacy feeds the doctor, and your wallet is bled dry.
When the patient in Deoria asked for the medicine names, they were likely trying to buy the generic salt from an outside chemist to save their hard-earned money. By doing so, they threatened the commission pipeline. And allegedly, that is why the fists started flying.
(Read our full breakdown here: The Great Medicine Markup: Why Your ?1 Pill Costs ?20)
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Parliament Has Heard the Echoes
This Deoria incident is not an isolated street fight. It is a symptom of a systemic, pan-India disease. We have extensively covered how the medical mafia operates, and this issue has already reached the highest levels of the Indian government.
Member of Parliament Swati Maliwal recently raised severe concerns in the Rajya Sabha regarding the hospital and medicine mafia. The extortion runs deep. Watch how pharmaceutical companies allegedly spend crores to send Indian doctors on luxurious foreign trips, just to secure these exact types of exclusive prescriptions:
And it doesn’t stop at the local clinic level. When patients are admitted to large corporate hospitals, the fleecing only amplifies through inflated bills and unnecessary diagnostic tests.
(Know your rights: Healthcare or Highway Robbery? Is Your Hospital Bill Making You Sick?)
Where is the IMA?
Whenever a frustrated patient’s family attacks a doctor, the Indian Medical Association (IMA) immediately calls for nationwide strikes. They demand central protection laws. And they absolutely should—violence against medical professionals is completely unacceptable.
But here is the million-dollar question: Where is that same IMA outrage when a doctor’s husband allegedly beats a patient’s family just for asking for medicine names? Where are the internal crackdowns on ethical malpractices, forced dispensary buying, and commission rackets?
The Deoria video isn’t just about a brawl. It is about unchecked arrogance. It is the arrogance of a system that looks the common man in the eye and says: “Don’t question us. Just pay, pray, and leave.” It is time to start asking for those names. Every single time.
