

India's Patient Journey Has 13 Steps. Zero Are Safe. We Need The Safest Hospitals.
The Issue
PETITION SUBTITLE:
From the moment you Google your symptoms to the moment you recover — or don't — every step of your healthcare journey in India is unscored, unverified, and unaccountable. This ends today.
ADDRESSED TO:
The Prime Minister of India · Ministry of Health & Family Welfare · National Medical Commission · National Dental Commission · Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology · NITI Aayog · All State Health Ministers · Parliamentary Standing Committee on Health & Family Welfare
THE PETITION:
Read this carefully.
Because what you are about to read is not an opinion.
It is a map.
A map of every single step you take as a patient in India — from the moment you first feel unwell to the moment you recover, or the moment you do not.
Thirteen steps.
Every one of them unscored.
Every one of them unverified.
Every one of them operating with zero mandatory public accountability.
This petition exists to change that.
Every single step. Every single platform. Every single institution. Scored. Published. Permanent. Public.
That is the HSSG Framework — the Healthcare Clinical Safety Score & Grade system — developed by Dr Prakash Kumar & Dr Pallavi Kusum India, Patna, Bihar.
And this petition demands it becomes the law of the land.
STEP ONE OF YOUR PATIENT JOURNEY: YOU SEARCH YOUR SYMPTOMS.
You are unwell. You do not yet know what is wrong. You do the thing every Indian does in 2026.
You open Google.
You type your symptoms.
Google returns results. Articles. Videos. Forum posts. Health websites. Sponsored content from pharmaceutical companies. Some accurate. Some dangerous. Some deliberately misleading. Some written by people with no medical qualification whatsoever.
Google has never been required to verify that a single piece of health content it surfaces is clinically accurate.
Google has never been required to show you which results were reviewed by a licensed doctor before being published.
Google earns revenue from health-related searches. It has no regulatory obligation to ensure that revenue is not built on dangerous medical misinformation.
The HSSG Framework assigns Google a score called GCSSG — the Google Clinical Safety Score & Grade — measuring exactly this. Whether health content is licensed-doctor reviewed before reaching patients. Whether specialist panels verify accuracy. Whether evidence-based standards are applied.
We graded it. The score is not one India should be comfortable with.
STEP TWO: YOU READ HEALTH CONTENT ON SOCIAL MEDIA.
You share what Google told you. Someone sends you a WhatsApp forward about your symptoms. You see a Facebook post from a page called "Health Tips India" with 2 million followers. You watch a YouTube video from a channel with no medical credentials. You read a LinkedIn post from someone calling themselves a health expert.
None of this content is required to be verified by a specialist doctor before it reaches you.
None of the platforms — Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, X, WhatsApp — are required to flag unverified health content.
None of them are scored on clinical safety.
The HSSG Framework assigns each platform an SMCSS — the Social Media Clinical Safety Score — measuring whether they have doctor-review mechanisms, specialist verification panels, evidence-based content standards, and consequences for dangerous health misinformation.
We graded nine platforms. The results are published. They are not reassuring.
Telegram received 28 out of 1000. Grade F. Dangerous. Unverified Medical Environment.
Published. On record. Permanent.
STEP THREE: YOU ASK AN AI.
You ask ChatGPT. You ask Gemini. You ask one of the dozens of AI tools now available on your phone, in your doctor's clinic, on telemedicine platforms, in hospital diagnostic departments.
The AI answers you. Confidently. Specifically. In your language. At any hour of the day or night.
That AI has no mandatory clinical safety score in India.
No regulatory body has assessed its diagnostic accuracy before it was deployed on patients.
No law requires the AI to tell you it is not a doctor.
No law requires the platform to disclose when an algorithm is participating in your clinical assessment.
The HSSG Framework assigns AI clinical tools an AICSSG — the AI Clinical Safety Score & Grade — measuring accuracy, evidence-base, disclaimer compliance, specialist verification, and accountability when the AI is wrong.
This score does not exist in Indian law. It exists only in the HSSG Framework.
This petition demands it becomes mandatory law. Before one more Indian patient is diagnosed by an unvalidated algorithm.
STEP FOUR: YOU CHOOSE A DOCTOR.
You search Google Reviews. You look at star ratings. You read testimonials. You ask neighbours. You see a sponsored listing.
The doctor with the highest Google ranking is not necessarily the most qualified. They are the most digitally optimised. The one who spent the most on Google Ads. The one whose receptionist asked every patient to leave a five-star review.
There is no national system in India for a patient to verify in thirty seconds that a doctor's degree is real, their registration is active, their specialisation is genuine, and their disciplinary record is clean.
The HSSG Framework assigns doctors a DSSG — the Doctor Safety Score & Grade — and assigns the systems patients use to choose doctors a PRSS — the Platform Review & Safety Score — measuring exactly how trustworthy those reviews actually are.
We are demanding both scores become public, mandatory, and searchable for every doctor and every review platform operating in India.
STEP FIVE: YOU BOOK AN APPOINTMENT.
You use a health app. Practo. PharmEasy. 1mg. DocsApp. Any one of hundreds of platforms that now sit between you and your doctor.
These apps recommend doctors. They surface specialists. They suggest facilities. They collect your health data. They process your payment.
They are not required to tell you what criteria they use to rank the doctors they recommend to you.
They are not required to verify that the doctors listed on their platform hold valid, active registrations.
They are not required to disclose whether commercial arrangements influence which doctors appear at the top of your search results.
The HSSG Framework assigns health apps an HACSSG — the Health App Clinical Safety Score & Grade — measuring transparency, data safety, recommendation integrity, and clinical verification standards.
None of these scores currently exist in Indian regulation.
This petition demands they do.
STEP SIX: YOU SEE THE DOCTOR.
You sit in front of a doctor. You trust them. You tell them what is wrong.
The doctor's degree is on the wall. You cannot verify it is real. There is no national real-time system for you to check. The doctor may be exactly who they say they are. Or they may not. In India, credential fraud in medicine is documented, prosecuted periodically, and structurally enabled by the absence of a real-time public verification system.
The HSSG Framework assigns every practising doctor a DSSG — the Doctor Safety Score & Grade — on six criteria: licensed qualification verification, specialist panel review of clinical decisions, evidence-based practice standards, treatment success rate transparency, diagnosis accuracy verification, and complication rate disclosure.
Two hundred points for licensed doctor reviewing health content before it reaches patients.
Two hundred points for a panel of specialist doctors verifying every piece of health content.
Two hundred points for evidence-based content verification by specialists.
One hundred and fifty points for treatment success rate verified by specialists.
One hundred and fifty points for diagnosis accuracy verified by specialists.
One hundred points for complication rate transparency and verification.
One thousand points total.
Every doctor. Every clinic. Every hospital.
Scored. Published. Public.
STEP SEVEN: YOU GET TESTED.
You go to a diagnostic laboratory. Or a radiology centre. You provide blood, urine, tissue. You are scanned, imaged, measured.
The laboratory is accredited. Or it says it is. You cannot verify that. The NABL accreditation of Indian diagnostic labs is self-reported, periodically audited, and not available in real-time to the patient ordering the test.
An AI tool may be reading your scan. You are not told. The AI has no mandatory published accuracy score.
The HSSG Framework assigns diagnostic labs and radiology centres a DLSS — the Diagnostic Lab Safety Score — measuring accreditation transparency, result accuracy rates, AI tool validation, turnaround time accountability, and error rate disclosure.
None of this is currently mandatory in India.
STEPS EIGHT THROUGH THIRTEEN:
You get a blood transfusion. Scored under BBSS — the Blood Bank Safety Score.
You enter a hospital or clinic. Scored under HCSSG — the Hospital & Clinic Safety Score & Grade.
You get medicine from a pharmacy. Scored under PHSS — the Pharmacy & Healthcare Safety Score.
You take nutrition supplements that were recommended by a health influencer with no medical qualification. Scored under NSS — the Nutrition Safety Score.
You follow up via telemedicine. Scored under ODCSSG — the Online Doctor & Clinic Safety Score & Grade.
And then — Step Thirteen.
You recover. Or you do not.
That outcome — whether you lived, whether you healed, whether you were harmed — is the only step in your entire patient journey that the government of India currently measures even partially. And it does not publish those measurements publicly.
Thirteen steps. Thirteen platforms. Thirteen categories of accountability.
Zero mandatory public scores for any of them.
THE GRADING SYSTEM
900 to 1000 points: Grade A+. Extremely High Clinical Reliability.
800 to 899 points: Grade A. High Clinical Reliability.
700 to 799 points: Grade B+. Moderately Safe.
600 to 699 points: Grade B. Average Safety.
500 to 599 points: Grade C. Low Clinical Reliability.
400 to 499 points: Grade D. High Risk of Misinformation.
Below 400 points: Grade F. Dangerous. Unverified Medical Environment.
Telegram scored 28 out of 1000. Grade F.
Every platform in India's healthcare ecosystem needs to be scored on this scale and the results published publicly so that every Indian patient can see, before they use any platform or visit any institution, whether they are entering an A+ environment or an F environment.
That is not a radical demand.
That is the minimum a country of 1.4 billion people owes its patients.
THE REVOLUTION THIS PETITION DEMANDS
We are demanding that the HSSG Framework — the Healthcare Clinical Safety Score & Grade system developed by Dr Prakash Kumar & Dr Pallavi Kusum India — be formally adopted as the basis for mandatory public safety scoring of every platform, institution, and practitioner in India's healthcare ecosystem.
We are demanding that every platform evaluated under the HSSG system — Google, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X, WhatsApp, Telegram, health apps, hospitals, clinics, diagnostic labs, pharmacies, blood banks, telemedicine platforms, AI clinical tools — be assigned a public score annually, with full methodology published, and consequences mandated for platforms that score below minimum safety thresholds.
We are demanding that any AI tool used in clinical settings in India receive a mandatory AICSSG score before deployment, updated annually, with public disclosure to every patient who interacts with it.
We are demanding that every hospital and clinic in India receive a mandatory HCSSG score, published quarterly, based on the six criteria of the HSSG framework — not on infrastructure checklists, not on self-reported compliance, but on actual clinical outcomes verified by independent specialist doctors.
We are demanding that the score of every platform, every hospital, every clinic, every doctor, every diagnostic lab, every pharmacy, and every telemedicine service be available on a single national government portal, searchable by any Indian citizen in thirty seconds, in Hindi and English.
This is what patient safety looks like when it is taken seriously.
This is what 1.4 billion people deserve.
This is what this petition demands.
TO THE GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
You have built the hospitals. Now score them.
You have approved the apps. Now grade them.
You have allowed AI into clinics. Now validate them.
You have registered the doctors. Now verify them publicly.
You have enrolled millions in Ayushman Bharat. Now publish their safety outcomes.
You have been taking credit for the infrastructure.
We are asking you to take responsibility for what happens inside it.
The HSSG Framework exists. It is built. It is published. It is ready.
All that is required is the political will to make it mandatory.
This petition is asking 1.4 billion Indians to generate that will.
THIS PETITION IS HISTORIC BECAUSE
No petition in Indian history has ever demanded the scoring of the entire patient journey — all thirteen steps, all thirteen platforms — under a single unified safety framework.
No petition in Indian history has ever demanded that Google, Facebook, YouTube, WhatsApp, Telegram, ChatGPT, Gemini, hospitals, clinics, doctors, diagnostic labs, pharmacies, and telemedicine platforms all be graded on the same clinical safety scale and published publicly.
No petition in Indian history has demanded that AI clinical tools receive mandatory safety scores before being deployed on patients.
This petition does all three.
Sign it. Because you have been a patient. Because someone you love has been a patient. Because every Indian who has ever walked through a hospital door, searched symptoms on Google, asked an AI a health question, or trusted a doctor whose degree they could not verify — deserves better than blind trust.
Sign it. Because 1.4 billion signatures cannot be ignored.
Sign it. Because the system will not change until the people it is supposed to serve demand that it does.
THE SINGLE SENTENCE
India has a map of the patient journey. It has thirteen steps. We are demanding every step be scored, every score be public, and every institution be accountable — for the first time in the history of this country.
Dr. Prakash & Dr Pallavi Kusum
MDS
Founder, Institute of Head, Neck and Face Surgery & Medicine Formerly Medident
Dental, Patna, Bihar.India
We developed the HSSG Framework — 1000 points, 6 evaluation criteria, 13 patient journey stages, coverage of every platform in India's healthcare ecosystem.
We graded Telegram: 28 out of 1000. Grade F. Published. Permanent.
We are not going away.
We are not asking politely anymore.
We are asking with 1.4 billion voices.
Sign this petition.
Share it with everyone who has ever needed a doctor, a hospital, a medicine, a test, a diagnosis, or an answer from Google at two in the morning when they were afraid.
That is every Indian.
Every. Single. One.

4
The Issue
PETITION SUBTITLE:
From the moment you Google your symptoms to the moment you recover — or don't — every step of your healthcare journey in India is unscored, unverified, and unaccountable. This ends today.
ADDRESSED TO:
The Prime Minister of India · Ministry of Health & Family Welfare · National Medical Commission · National Dental Commission · Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology · NITI Aayog · All State Health Ministers · Parliamentary Standing Committee on Health & Family Welfare
THE PETITION:
Read this carefully.
Because what you are about to read is not an opinion.
It is a map.
A map of every single step you take as a patient in India — from the moment you first feel unwell to the moment you recover, or the moment you do not.
Thirteen steps.
Every one of them unscored.
Every one of them unverified.
Every one of them operating with zero mandatory public accountability.
This petition exists to change that.
Every single step. Every single platform. Every single institution. Scored. Published. Permanent. Public.
That is the HSSG Framework — the Healthcare Clinical Safety Score & Grade system — developed by Dr Prakash Kumar & Dr Pallavi Kusum India, Patna, Bihar.
And this petition demands it becomes the law of the land.
STEP ONE OF YOUR PATIENT JOURNEY: YOU SEARCH YOUR SYMPTOMS.
You are unwell. You do not yet know what is wrong. You do the thing every Indian does in 2026.
You open Google.
You type your symptoms.
Google returns results. Articles. Videos. Forum posts. Health websites. Sponsored content from pharmaceutical companies. Some accurate. Some dangerous. Some deliberately misleading. Some written by people with no medical qualification whatsoever.
Google has never been required to verify that a single piece of health content it surfaces is clinically accurate.
Google has never been required to show you which results were reviewed by a licensed doctor before being published.
Google earns revenue from health-related searches. It has no regulatory obligation to ensure that revenue is not built on dangerous medical misinformation.
The HSSG Framework assigns Google a score called GCSSG — the Google Clinical Safety Score & Grade — measuring exactly this. Whether health content is licensed-doctor reviewed before reaching patients. Whether specialist panels verify accuracy. Whether evidence-based standards are applied.
We graded it. The score is not one India should be comfortable with.
STEP TWO: YOU READ HEALTH CONTENT ON SOCIAL MEDIA.
You share what Google told you. Someone sends you a WhatsApp forward about your symptoms. You see a Facebook post from a page called "Health Tips India" with 2 million followers. You watch a YouTube video from a channel with no medical credentials. You read a LinkedIn post from someone calling themselves a health expert.
None of this content is required to be verified by a specialist doctor before it reaches you.
None of the platforms — Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, X, WhatsApp — are required to flag unverified health content.
None of them are scored on clinical safety.
The HSSG Framework assigns each platform an SMCSS — the Social Media Clinical Safety Score — measuring whether they have doctor-review mechanisms, specialist verification panels, evidence-based content standards, and consequences for dangerous health misinformation.
We graded nine platforms. The results are published. They are not reassuring.
Telegram received 28 out of 1000. Grade F. Dangerous. Unverified Medical Environment.
Published. On record. Permanent.
STEP THREE: YOU ASK AN AI.
You ask ChatGPT. You ask Gemini. You ask one of the dozens of AI tools now available on your phone, in your doctor's clinic, on telemedicine platforms, in hospital diagnostic departments.
The AI answers you. Confidently. Specifically. In your language. At any hour of the day or night.
That AI has no mandatory clinical safety score in India.
No regulatory body has assessed its diagnostic accuracy before it was deployed on patients.
No law requires the AI to tell you it is not a doctor.
No law requires the platform to disclose when an algorithm is participating in your clinical assessment.
The HSSG Framework assigns AI clinical tools an AICSSG — the AI Clinical Safety Score & Grade — measuring accuracy, evidence-base, disclaimer compliance, specialist verification, and accountability when the AI is wrong.
This score does not exist in Indian law. It exists only in the HSSG Framework.
This petition demands it becomes mandatory law. Before one more Indian patient is diagnosed by an unvalidated algorithm.
STEP FOUR: YOU CHOOSE A DOCTOR.
You search Google Reviews. You look at star ratings. You read testimonials. You ask neighbours. You see a sponsored listing.
The doctor with the highest Google ranking is not necessarily the most qualified. They are the most digitally optimised. The one who spent the most on Google Ads. The one whose receptionist asked every patient to leave a five-star review.
There is no national system in India for a patient to verify in thirty seconds that a doctor's degree is real, their registration is active, their specialisation is genuine, and their disciplinary record is clean.
The HSSG Framework assigns doctors a DSSG — the Doctor Safety Score & Grade — and assigns the systems patients use to choose doctors a PRSS — the Platform Review & Safety Score — measuring exactly how trustworthy those reviews actually are.
We are demanding both scores become public, mandatory, and searchable for every doctor and every review platform operating in India.
STEP FIVE: YOU BOOK AN APPOINTMENT.
You use a health app. Practo. PharmEasy. 1mg. DocsApp. Any one of hundreds of platforms that now sit between you and your doctor.
These apps recommend doctors. They surface specialists. They suggest facilities. They collect your health data. They process your payment.
They are not required to tell you what criteria they use to rank the doctors they recommend to you.
They are not required to verify that the doctors listed on their platform hold valid, active registrations.
They are not required to disclose whether commercial arrangements influence which doctors appear at the top of your search results.
The HSSG Framework assigns health apps an HACSSG — the Health App Clinical Safety Score & Grade — measuring transparency, data safety, recommendation integrity, and clinical verification standards.
None of these scores currently exist in Indian regulation.
This petition demands they do.
STEP SIX: YOU SEE THE DOCTOR.
You sit in front of a doctor. You trust them. You tell them what is wrong.
The doctor's degree is on the wall. You cannot verify it is real. There is no national real-time system for you to check. The doctor may be exactly who they say they are. Or they may not. In India, credential fraud in medicine is documented, prosecuted periodically, and structurally enabled by the absence of a real-time public verification system.
The HSSG Framework assigns every practising doctor a DSSG — the Doctor Safety Score & Grade — on six criteria: licensed qualification verification, specialist panel review of clinical decisions, evidence-based practice standards, treatment success rate transparency, diagnosis accuracy verification, and complication rate disclosure.
Two hundred points for licensed doctor reviewing health content before it reaches patients.
Two hundred points for a panel of specialist doctors verifying every piece of health content.
Two hundred points for evidence-based content verification by specialists.
One hundred and fifty points for treatment success rate verified by specialists.
One hundred and fifty points for diagnosis accuracy verified by specialists.
One hundred points for complication rate transparency and verification.
One thousand points total.
Every doctor. Every clinic. Every hospital.
Scored. Published. Public.
STEP SEVEN: YOU GET TESTED.
You go to a diagnostic laboratory. Or a radiology centre. You provide blood, urine, tissue. You are scanned, imaged, measured.
The laboratory is accredited. Or it says it is. You cannot verify that. The NABL accreditation of Indian diagnostic labs is self-reported, periodically audited, and not available in real-time to the patient ordering the test.
An AI tool may be reading your scan. You are not told. The AI has no mandatory published accuracy score.
The HSSG Framework assigns diagnostic labs and radiology centres a DLSS — the Diagnostic Lab Safety Score — measuring accreditation transparency, result accuracy rates, AI tool validation, turnaround time accountability, and error rate disclosure.
None of this is currently mandatory in India.
STEPS EIGHT THROUGH THIRTEEN:
You get a blood transfusion. Scored under BBSS — the Blood Bank Safety Score.
You enter a hospital or clinic. Scored under HCSSG — the Hospital & Clinic Safety Score & Grade.
You get medicine from a pharmacy. Scored under PHSS — the Pharmacy & Healthcare Safety Score.
You take nutrition supplements that were recommended by a health influencer with no medical qualification. Scored under NSS — the Nutrition Safety Score.
You follow up via telemedicine. Scored under ODCSSG — the Online Doctor & Clinic Safety Score & Grade.
And then — Step Thirteen.
You recover. Or you do not.
That outcome — whether you lived, whether you healed, whether you were harmed — is the only step in your entire patient journey that the government of India currently measures even partially. And it does not publish those measurements publicly.
Thirteen steps. Thirteen platforms. Thirteen categories of accountability.
Zero mandatory public scores for any of them.
THE GRADING SYSTEM
900 to 1000 points: Grade A+. Extremely High Clinical Reliability.
800 to 899 points: Grade A. High Clinical Reliability.
700 to 799 points: Grade B+. Moderately Safe.
600 to 699 points: Grade B. Average Safety.
500 to 599 points: Grade C. Low Clinical Reliability.
400 to 499 points: Grade D. High Risk of Misinformation.
Below 400 points: Grade F. Dangerous. Unverified Medical Environment.
Telegram scored 28 out of 1000. Grade F.
Every platform in India's healthcare ecosystem needs to be scored on this scale and the results published publicly so that every Indian patient can see, before they use any platform or visit any institution, whether they are entering an A+ environment or an F environment.
That is not a radical demand.
That is the minimum a country of 1.4 billion people owes its patients.
THE REVOLUTION THIS PETITION DEMANDS
We are demanding that the HSSG Framework — the Healthcare Clinical Safety Score & Grade system developed by Dr Prakash Kumar & Dr Pallavi Kusum India — be formally adopted as the basis for mandatory public safety scoring of every platform, institution, and practitioner in India's healthcare ecosystem.
We are demanding that every platform evaluated under the HSSG system — Google, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X, WhatsApp, Telegram, health apps, hospitals, clinics, diagnostic labs, pharmacies, blood banks, telemedicine platforms, AI clinical tools — be assigned a public score annually, with full methodology published, and consequences mandated for platforms that score below minimum safety thresholds.
We are demanding that any AI tool used in clinical settings in India receive a mandatory AICSSG score before deployment, updated annually, with public disclosure to every patient who interacts with it.
We are demanding that every hospital and clinic in India receive a mandatory HCSSG score, published quarterly, based on the six criteria of the HSSG framework — not on infrastructure checklists, not on self-reported compliance, but on actual clinical outcomes verified by independent specialist doctors.
We are demanding that the score of every platform, every hospital, every clinic, every doctor, every diagnostic lab, every pharmacy, and every telemedicine service be available on a single national government portal, searchable by any Indian citizen in thirty seconds, in Hindi and English.
This is what patient safety looks like when it is taken seriously.
This is what 1.4 billion people deserve.
This is what this petition demands.
TO THE GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
You have built the hospitals. Now score them.
You have approved the apps. Now grade them.
You have allowed AI into clinics. Now validate them.
You have registered the doctors. Now verify them publicly.
You have enrolled millions in Ayushman Bharat. Now publish their safety outcomes.
You have been taking credit for the infrastructure.
We are asking you to take responsibility for what happens inside it.
The HSSG Framework exists. It is built. It is published. It is ready.
All that is required is the political will to make it mandatory.
This petition is asking 1.4 billion Indians to generate that will.
THIS PETITION IS HISTORIC BECAUSE
No petition in Indian history has ever demanded the scoring of the entire patient journey — all thirteen steps, all thirteen platforms — under a single unified safety framework.
No petition in Indian history has ever demanded that Google, Facebook, YouTube, WhatsApp, Telegram, ChatGPT, Gemini, hospitals, clinics, doctors, diagnostic labs, pharmacies, and telemedicine platforms all be graded on the same clinical safety scale and published publicly.
No petition in Indian history has demanded that AI clinical tools receive mandatory safety scores before being deployed on patients.
This petition does all three.
Sign it. Because you have been a patient. Because someone you love has been a patient. Because every Indian who has ever walked through a hospital door, searched symptoms on Google, asked an AI a health question, or trusted a doctor whose degree they could not verify — deserves better than blind trust.
Sign it. Because 1.4 billion signatures cannot be ignored.
Sign it. Because the system will not change until the people it is supposed to serve demand that it does.
THE SINGLE SENTENCE
India has a map of the patient journey. It has thirteen steps. We are demanding every step be scored, every score be public, and every institution be accountable — for the first time in the history of this country.
Dr. Prakash & Dr Pallavi Kusum
MDS
Founder, Institute of Head, Neck and Face Surgery & Medicine Formerly Medident
Dental, Patna, Bihar.India
We developed the HSSG Framework — 1000 points, 6 evaluation criteria, 13 patient journey stages, coverage of every platform in India's healthcare ecosystem.
We graded Telegram: 28 out of 1000. Grade F. Published. Permanent.
We are not going away.
We are not asking politely anymore.
We are asking with 1.4 billion voices.
Sign this petition.
Share it with everyone who has ever needed a doctor, a hospital, a medicine, a test, a diagnosis, or an answer from Google at two in the morning when they were afraid.
That is every Indian.
Every. Single. One.

The Decision Makers
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Petition created on 23 May 2026