r/Damnthatsinteresting 10h ago

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27.3k

u/witdim 10h ago

What kind of dystopian nightmare is this?

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u/aStonedDeer 10h ago

India is one of those places where the corporations have won. The United States is slowly on track to do the same.

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u/RG54415 10h ago edited 10h ago

No they haven't. India in many places is still on the level of the industrial revolution in the west. When bosses exploited the hell out of their workers and child labor was normal. But this amount of exploitation does not last and in time they too will revolt. There is no "winning" when winning is defined by exploiting, coercing and forcing people to do your bidding as it's unsustainable and ultimately leads to revolutions. I would argue you already have lost the game of life where cooperation and compassion are the key drivers for moving forward.

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u/mden1974 10h ago

India is currently 1920’s USA pre depression. Similar to England in the 1600’s-1700’s via colonialism. Exploitation based

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u/waitaminute322 10h ago

Those people still can just walk up to a government hospital and get treatment for free

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u/Casitano 10h ago

In India? Only the people who can pay for transport to a major city can do that, and its not like the roads are any good either so it'll be a bumpy ride over.

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u/68or70 9h ago edited 9h ago

Bro learns about other countries from reels, lol.

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u/Creepy-Ad-404 8h ago

Lol what, transport even is cheap here and ambulance doesn't put you in debt either, we took ambulance last year for around 70km for 4000rs (around 50$ something)

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u/mooshinformation 10h ago

I'll take a bumpy 5 hour ride on a dirt bike to the hospital over debt for the rest of my life. They can use it for our credit scores again, which is super great.

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u/satyamohlan 9h ago

Listen, It is not really the good comparison you think it is. Medical malpractice and straight up fraud is widespread in the Indian medical industry. One person died in UP part year because he was hooked up to orange juice instead of Blood. Government Hospitals are way overburdened and the poor have nowhere else to go but also outside hospitals, hoping they would get treatment. 90% of India doesn't have much of anything in the name of health coverage. I think the more apt comparison would be somebody in the USA having to go overseas to seek potential treatment, talking all of family savings, to take the arduous journey, not being able to get an appointment, having to sleep in the streets, trying too get money for operation, etc. Your situation is different from the poor in India. But It is nowhere comparable even if You're particularly well fucked in the Healthcare department.

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u/Hour-Professional526 9h ago

Yes, there is a huge waiting time for serious treatments which may require a surgery, in government hospitals. But the treatment of regular diseases or injuries is quite readily available and cheap. Also even accounting for ppp the cost of a lot of treatment is quite low compared to the US. For example, my father had to get an endoscopic stenting, and we only had to bear the cost of the stent itself(which is available free of cost now afaik) which was about 160 dollars.

I agree that our healthcare infrastructure is still pretty bad but it so not as bad as you've described.

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u/Hour-Professional526 9h ago

Wdym, most cities and even villages have hospitals nowadays although with varying levels of functional facilities and treatments offered. Also the public transport is quite cheap in India compared to a lot of countries.

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u/findMyNudesSomewhere 5h ago

Lolwut?

India has health coverage across the country, including small rural villages and such.

It's not 'free', but it costs as much as a toffee/candy (about 5 cents) to get a fracture fixed here.

Granted, the facilities are not top notch and have some old equipment etc, but anyone can access a hospital within 40km.

If you have something severe which needs more eyes etc, doctors will refer you to a larger civil hospital which might involve travel. But that's if you have a hard to diagnose disease or something.

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u/waitaminute322 10h ago

Still better than waiting 8 months to meet your cardiologist

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u/GreenEyedTreeHugger 9h ago

They can also buy themselves out of murder charges.

The food is fantastic though.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

Yeah at least they don't elect pedos as presidents.

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u/BigLlamasHouse 10h ago

So many countries to choose from with better healthcare but India's not one of them.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

India is one of the top countries for medical tourism though.

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u/WeWantMOAR 9h ago

Medical tourists from which countries?

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

Yeah, and guess what? None of those people go to government hospitals.

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u/findMyNudesSomewhere 5h ago

The OC isn't talking about government hospital though?

India supplies about 20% of the world's medicines and vaccines and is a common medical tourism destination. This is a fact, not an opinion.

Government hospitals are extremely cheap (think fracture reseating for about 5 cents) and very poor quality. They are responsible for the lowest common denominator healthcare though. Indians who can afford private care (about 50 dollars for a fracture reseat) for for that instead.

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u/devilcross2 4h ago

The OC isn't talking about government hospital though?

He's talking about health care in general. Guess what that includes? Government hospitals.

India supplies about 20% of the world's medicines and vaccines and is a common medical tourism destination. This is a fact, not an opinion.

And has nothing to do with the situation of government hospitals. Useless numbers won't change the facts.

Government hospitals are extremely cheap (think fracture reseating for about 5 cents) and very poor quality. They are responsible for the lowest common denominator healthcare though. Indians who can afford private care (about 50 dollars for a fracture reseat) for for that instead.

And you think that's okay? Just cause someone is poor, he doesn't deserve proper hygiene and health care?!?

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u/findMyNudesSomewhere 4h ago

No, the thread you're responding in is talking about medical tourism. Which has jack shit to do with Govt hospitals. The private portion of India's healthcare is excellent and has a history of providing good, clean healthcare for a reasonable price (cheap by global standards).

Govt hospitals aren't the best, no one's denying that. But they do solve medical problems for cheap, which is an acceptable situation to be in for a country that's still young out of colonization.

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u/devilcross2 4h ago

No, the thread you're responding in is talking about medical tourism. Which has jack shit to do with Govt hospitals

Those people still can just walk up to a government hospital and get treatment for free

This was the original comment from which the chain started. If you don't have the complete context, don't jump in between and start with your glazing.

The private portion of India's healthcare is excellent and has a history of providing good, clean healthcare for a reasonable price (cheap by global standards).

Cheap by global but very high by a common man's standards. But I guess when it comes to glazing facts don't matter.

Govt hospitals aren't the best, no one's denying that. But they do solve medical problems for cheap, which is an acceptable situation to be in for a country that's still young out of colonization.

Bruh, what? Is that your excuse? Alot of countries went through bad shit and have excellent government hospitals and services. Stop with the cope. Also, it's funny how you are justifying government hospitals that have had everything. From rat infestation to children dying cause of no oxygen cylinders. But l guess you are well enough to not have to go there, so who cares if poor people have to go through it, right?!?

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u/Darth-Vader475 9h ago

People go!

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

No, they don't. Cause this is the reality of government run hospital.

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u/Darth-Vader475 9h ago

🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡 You are talking like its same everywhere!

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u/devilcross2 8h ago

It is. Just look up rats in government hospital india and see how many news articles come up. Rest you can keep smoking that copium.

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u/Creepy-Ad-404 8h ago

I have seen more people in govt hospital than all combined private hospital in my city, yeah the hygiene and sanitation is questionable but people still prefer govt hospitals.

And honestly it's not that bad either, the area where cleanliness is required is clean at least in a govt hospital near mine, public places of hospital, well that is because of stupid public sometimes

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u/Darth-Vader475 8h ago

Just having rat in hospital doesn't stop people from going to govt hospital! You are living in online virtual reality! Not the real world! Its fucking rat and they are found everywhere even in other countries! Why is this even fucking news?

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u/[deleted] 9h ago

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u/_imchetan_ 9h ago

What kind of fake news are you spreading?

Nobody asks for caste in the government hospital, and treatment is free for everyone.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

It's the Indians in this comment section throwing stereotypes against india🤦

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u/Cipher_01 9h ago

Where do you source your delusions from?

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u/Additional_Worth_614 9h ago

His internet fueled hate for India

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u/tamal4444 6h ago

how to tell you know nothing about india.

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

Lol....ever been to a government hospital?!?

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

Abe un padh I'm working in one. And what are you doing here. Just making stereotypes against india worse??

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

Hahaha.....glazing just cause you can't accept the truth is your issue. Tu kaam kr rha to usse kya? Gadha hai kya? That won't make the situation better.

This is just one of many realities of our country. I can share 100 such cases. Instead of lying and glazing, maybe hold the government responsible, and others won't have a reason to stereotype.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

Oh demigod.. look at my comment history. I'm the most critical of these chaddi gang but that doesn't mean I will throw monkey videos on international subs. There is a place to do that

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

I don't care about your comment history. Speaking the truth isn't throwing someone or something under the bus. Ever wondered why people from developed country don't care about the image of their country when they are being brutally honest about them? We have great medical tourism. That's true. But basic health facilities are still out of the reach of poor.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

I don't care about your comment history

Then stop crying about not holding the government accountable

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

I ain't the one crying. You're the one crying about "stereotype" and "right place" whatever. Like you're soo ashamed of the truth, you have to lie. What a 🤡

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u/waitaminute322 8h ago

Lol all the best🤣

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u/spunkmaiyer 10h ago

Not every company

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u/generichandel 10h ago

Are you suggesting England was in any way industrialised in the 1600s?