Herbal medicine for diabetes kills four in India
A self-styled doctor and three of his patients died in a south Indian village after drinking a poisonous herbal medicine which he claimed cured diabetes and hypertension, officials said Tuesday.
Another patient is in a critical condition at a government-run hospital after they drank the concoction prepared by the doctor at his makeshift clinic in Alagappuram village in Tamil Nadu on Sunday.
“They
were unconscious and vomiting and were shifted to hospital where four of them
died,” said local police officer Muthiah, who only uses one name.
The
doctor, named by police as Muthupandi, first drank the herbal mix to prove its
efficacy before giving it to five of his patients from the village, the police
officer told AFP.
Muthupandi claimed to run a clinic in the nearby town of
Tenkasi and was visiting villages in the region to treat patients.
The
officer said police suspect that Muthupandi was only posing as a doctor and had
a criminal background. Detectives have already ordered a thorough investigation
into his credentials.
“There
are few theft cases against him but nothing is conclusive. We are checking if
he had any medical qualification” he said.
Government
doctor Jasline Rajiah said viscera samples had been sent off for analysis at a
laboratory to establish the cause of dead.
“It
apparently looks like a case of poisoning,” Rajiah told AFP.
Thousands
of Indians mostly in rural areas fall prey to people posing as doctors in a
country where public healthcare system remains dismal.
Many
claim to be traditional practitioners of Indian traditional medical systems
like Ayurvedic and Siddha which rely heavily on herbal medicines.
AFP
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