By Medical Dialogues Team
Ahmedabad: The Special Operations Group (SOG) of Ahmedabad Rural Police has arrested a man posing as an allopathic doctor in the Dholeshwarnagar area near Changodar Post Office. The accused was found operating a full-fledged medical practice without holding any recognised medical degree. According to the news reports, the accused, identified as a native of Mandalhar village in West Bengal’s Nadia district had been illegally practising modern medicine from Shakti Avenue, Moraiya village, located off Changodar-Tajpur Road. Despite lacking any formal medical degree or registration with the Gujarat Medical Council, Ghosh continued to offer medical consultations and treatment to unsuspecting patients. The Changodar Police have registered a case under the Gujarat Medical Practitioners Act, 1963.Also Read: Telangana Medical Council cracks down on 7 Illegal clinics in RangareddyAccording to Gujrat Samachar, acting on a tip-off, a SOG team conducted an operation and recovered allopathic medicines, syringes, injections, and other medical paraphernalia worth ₹27,403 from the suspect’s premises. A case has been registered at Changodar police station, and the accused has been taken into custody.This is not Ghosh’s first brush with the law. He was previously booked in 2023 under the same Act for similar offences. Authorities suspect he may have been running the illegal practice for an extended period, posing a serious threat to public health.Also Read: 15 Gujarat doctors accused of diverting Rs 1.87 crore from clinical trials to personal accountsMedical Dialogues had previously reported that around 15 doctors of VS General Hospital have been accused of transferring nearly Rs 1.87 crore meant for the hospital directly to their personal accounts from 2021, as revealed in a report prepared by Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation’s five-member probe panel, which found financial irregularities in about 65 human clinical trials conducted at the hospital.The hospital, run by the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC), has been the site for 65 human clinical trials since 2021. A five-member probe panel set up by AMC has now submitted its final report, confirming large-scale irregularities and misuse of funds received from pharmaceutical companies and research firms.