Eastern Eye (UK)

Champion of migrant NHS doctors mourned

MEDICS’ GROUPS AND POLITICIAN­S PAY TRIBUTE TO DR KAILASH CHAND

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AN AWARD-WINNING former Tameside GP and leading NHS campaigner, Dr Kailash Chand OBE, has passed away at the age of 73.

His son Dr Aseem Malhotra said on Twitter his father had suffered a cardiac arrest on Monday evening (26).

Dr Chand was one of the most influentia­l Asian doctors in the UK, as he was vocal while highlighti­ng inequaliti­es in the healthcare system.

He was the first Asian to be elected as deputy chair of the powerful British Medical Associatio­n Council (BMA), which represents 150,000 doctors in the UK and was regularly included among Britain’s top 50 most influentia­l GPs in the annual ‘National Pulse Power List.’

In the GG2 Power List 2020-2021,

published by the Asian Media Group, which also prints Eastern Eye and Garavi Gujarat news weeklies, Dr Chand is ranked 78 in the list of 101 most influentia­l British Asians.

Dr Chand was born in 1949 and spent his childhood in Shimla, the capital of the northern Indian state of Himachal Pradesh.

The eldest of five children, he was raised by his mother (a housekeepe­r) and his father (who was an employee of the Indian Railways).

He came to the UK as a junior doctor in the late 1970s. Although he took pride in working for the NHS and saw the positive impact of easy-access healthcare, he also faced discrimina­tion and racism on frequent occasions.

In a comment piece for Eastern Eye

published last week (July 23), Dr Chand wrote, “As a GP trainee in a white practice, patients refused to be seen by me. Once I qualified to be a GP, I struggled to get any partnershi­p and allowed myself to be exploited as a salaried doctor with bare minimum wages. Even when I was in senior positions in the NHS and the British Medical Associatio­n (BMA), I continued to suffer from institutio­nal racism.”

He also revealed he wanted to be a paediatric consultant, but was told “bluntly that this speciality is not for Internatio­nal Medical Graduates (IMGs). “I was advised by well-meaning white senior doctors to either choose a less popular speciality like geriatrics/ psychiatry/ accident and emergencie­s, or pick up a career in general practice.”

During the pandemic, Dr Chand frequently spoke about the disproport­ionate impact of Covid-19 on black, Asian and minority ethnic communitie­s. He made regular appearance­s on television news programmes and also took part in roundtable­s on healthcare conducted by Eastern Eye.

In June last year, he told this paper, “Black, Asian ethnic minorities are very good to do all kinds of things, except leadership,” referring to how Asian and black people were dying needlessly and disproport­ionately because they were not being represente­d in senior ranks of the NHS.

“They are good enough to die, but they are not good enough to lead. Even today, things are going backward, not going forward.”

Along with several other health leaders, Dr Chand urged the government to investigat­e the disproport­ionate impact on BAME communitie­s and the reasons behind it.

Triggered by the calls to action, the government equalities office agreed to address Covid-19 health equalities in a quarterly report. Dr Chand received an OBE in 2013 for his services to the NHS. He was a senior fellow of the BMA and was named ‘GP of the Year’ by the Royal College of General Practition­ers.

More recently, he was appointed honorary professor of health and wellbeing by Bolton University. He was also trustee of the homelessne­ss charity Greater Manchester Mayor’s Charity.

Health campaigner­s, doctors’ groups and politician­s all paid tribute to him following his sudden death.

The BMA said, described him as a “staunch defender of the NHS” and said his was a “life of service to his patients and fellow doctors”.

The British Associatio­n of Physicians of Indian Origin (BAPIO) said they would “miss his unparallel­ed wisdom, kindness and his #lessonsofl­ife.

“He passionate­ly campaigned to

make the NHS a better institutio­n and been one of the most inspiratio­nal medical leaders of our time.”

Labour mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, said, “Heartbroke­n about the sudden loss of my dear friend, Kailash. He was everything to me and the NHS was everything to him. One of the kindest souls ever to have walked this earth. You gave me so much and your legacy will live on.”

 ??  ?? LIFE OF SERVICE: Dr Kailash Chand
LIFE OF SERVICE: Dr Kailash Chand

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