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A Late Doctor’s Service Challenges Everything You Thought About Medical Costs In India
Padma Shri awardee Dr. Munishwar Chandra Dawar, the iconic physician known for charging just Rs 20 per consultation, passed away at the age of 79. Revered for his tireless service to the poor, Dr. Dawar was not just a doctor but a symbol of accessible healthcare in India. His funeral, held at Gupteshwar Muktidham in Jabalpur, was attended by countless admirers and colleagues who came to pay their respects to a man who never let money come between a patient and treatment.
Service Over Self: Dawar's Lifelong Commitment
Born on January 16, 1946, in pre-Partition Punjab (now Pakistan), Dr. Dawar moved to India with his family and later completed his MBBS in 1967. After serving in the Indian Army during the 1971 Indo-Pak war, he returned to Jabalpur to begin his practice in 1972-where he started charging just Rs 2 per visit. That nominal fee rose only to Rs 20 over the decades, a rare phenomenon in a world where healthcare costs continue to spiral. His devotion to serving the common man earned him the Padma Shri in 2023.
Myth vs Reality: Are Indian Doctors Really Expensive?
Interestingly, Dr. Dawar's story aligns with a wider, underreported truth: Indian doctors charge among the lowest consultation fees globally, particularly across BRICS nations. A recent study published in the IOSR Journal of Dental and Medical Sciences titled "Consultation Fees of Indian Doctors: The Myth Demystified" offers evidence to support this. Authored by Sumangala Bhat K, the paper reveals that a typical Indian doctor's fee equals just 3-4 burgers or 5-7 Coca-Cola bottles while haircuts at 5-star salons or SPAs can cost up to 210% more.
What The Study Found
The study categorised medical professionals into general practitioners, specialists, and sub-specialists, comparing their fees with doctors in BRICS nations and with everyday services like burgers, salon visits, and bottled drinks. The results debunked a common perception:
- Indian doctors charge the lowest among BRICS countries.
- In contrast, premium salon services often cost significantly more than a medical consultation.

The Bigger Picture: Why This Misconception Exists
The study argues that India's perception of doctors being "expensive" stems from skewed public healthcare expectations. In a system where value is judged more by cost than quality, doctors especially in private practice are rarely acknowledged for the economic value they provide. The paper, accepted in May 2020, urges a more balanced view that appreciates both affordability and service quality.
A Life That Embodied the Findings
Dr. Dawar was, in many ways, the human embodiment of this study's findings. For decades, he practiced what the research points out: that healthcare can remain humane and affordable without compromising dignity. While the nation debates healthcare reforms and costs, Dr. Dawar offered real solutions through unwavering service and compassion.
Tributes Pour In
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav called his passing "an irreparable loss," while Jabalpur MP Rakesh Singh called him "the pride of Jabalpur." Yadav, who had met Dr. Dawar recently, added: "Your demise has left a deep void in the field of human service and public welfare."
Dr. Dawar's passing isn't just the loss of a beloved physician-it's the fading of a kind of service that rarely makes headlines but touches countless lives. His life's work challenges the idea that affordability needs compromise.



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