A fatal epidemic of fake doctors


Quack doctor: Abdul Waheed (left) trying to diagnose a minor in his unlicensed clinic on the outskirts of Hyderabad city in Sindh province. — AFP

Rusted nails hold used infusion tubes on the wall of a clinic run by one among hundreds of thousands of unqualified doctors operating across Pakistan.

Dozens of patients visit the small roadside shop each day in the southern Sindh province, where a few chairs are arranged around wooden tables used to lay patients down.

“These patients have faith in me. They believe I can treat them well,” said Abdul Waheed, who opened the facility a few months ago outside Hyderabad city.

During the day, the 48-year-old works at a private hospital in Hyderabad. In the evenings, he comes to the village of Tando Saeed Khan to see patients at his clinic, charging 300 rupees (RM4.30) per consultation.

“I have spent so much time in this field. I have worked with several doctors. Thanks to God, I have confidence to diagnose a patient and treat the disease,” Waheed said.

There is no signboard, no registration number, and he has no legal authorisation to practise as a doctor.

Waheed, who has a diploma in homeopathy and has completed a four-year nursing course, speaks with confidence.

After examining two young children, he insisted that patients come to him willingly and trust his abilities.

“No one has questioned me yet. If someone comes, I will see what to do,” he said, reflecting the ease with which unqualified individuals practise medicine in Pakistan.

Such unlicensed clinics are often the first, and sometimes the only, point of care for poor communities.

Abdul Ghafoor Shoro, secretary general of the Pakistan Medical Association, said there are “more than 600,000 fake doctors” operating across Pakistan.

This nationwide figure has been confirmed by the Sindh Healthcare Commission (SHCC), based on estimates from the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council.

Calling the practice a public health epidemic, Shoro said that such practitioners work with doctors, learn a few things there, and then open their own clinics.

“Unqualified doctors don’t know the side effects and exact dosage of medicines. If a disease is not properly diagnosed, it can become dangerous,” Shoro said.

“The instruments they use are not sterilised. They simply wash them with water and continue using them. They reuse syringes, which increases the spread of hepatitis and AIDS.”

As AFP journalists visited Tando Saeed Khan, another unqualified doctor immediately closed his clinic and disappeared.

Outside Waheed’s shop, villager Ali Ahmed said there are multiple such clinics in the area.

“None of them have qualified doctors. People aren’t educated and can’t recognise qualified doctors,” the 31-year-old said.

Medical experts say this unchecked practice has a direct impact on Pakistan’s already strained healthcare system, with tertiary care hospitals overwhelmed by patients whose conditions worsen after improper treatment.

Khalid Bukhari, the head of Civil Hospital Karachi, said the facility regularly receives such cases from across the country.

“They misdiagnose and mistreat patients. Our hospital is overloaded. Most of the cases we receive are those ruined by them,” said Bukhari,.

“These people are playing with the lives of poor citizens. If people go to proper doctors and receive precise treatment, they will not need to come to us.”

Regulatory authorities acknowledge their failure to control the problem.

“We have limited resources. This practice cannot be eliminated easily. If we shut down 25 outlets, 25 new ones open the very next day,” said Ahson Qavi Siddiqi, the head of SHCC. — AFP

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