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India's silent healthcare crisis and the case for palliative care

The Sunday Guardian

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September 14, 2025

An ancient Tamil wisdom speaks to a truth our contemporary medical system frequently overlooks: "Vaazhvadharkaana kanniyathai polave, irappirkum kanniyam mukkiyamanadhu." (Just as dignity in living holds importance, dignity in dying carries equal weight.)

- DR (PROF) U.S. VISHAL RAO

India's silent healthcare crisis and the case for palliative care

India proudly commemorates each medical advancement that prolongs life. Our achievements in curative cancer treatments and other non-communicable diseases (NCDs) have been extraordinary, continuously expanding the frontiers of human longevity. However, in this unwavering quest to add years to life, we have overlooked the equally crucial goal of adding life to years. We have mastered the art of battling death while remaining novices at guiding the transition toward it. This imbalance has spawned a quiet yet widespread crisis: the abandonment of palliative care.

This abandonment originates from a fundamental misconception. To many, "palliative" serves as a coded word for surrender—spoken in subdued voices, perceived as medical abandonment, a final pathway to end-of-life management. This stigma represents not only a tragedy but also a grave error. It denies millions of patients and families access to care that delivers comfort, preserves dignity, and extends compassion precisely when these are most essential.

Dismantling Misconceptions: Understanding Palliative Care's True Nature

Clarification is essential: Palliative care differs fundamentally from hospice care. Hospice addresses the terminal phase when curative options have been exhausted. Palliative care, conversely, should commence immediately upon diagnosis of any serious, life-threatening condition. It represents comprehensive support that operates alongside curative interventions.

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