BharatAgri CEO Siddharth Dialani praised Bengaluru’s healthcare efficiency after obtaining a rabies vaccine in 10 minutes at a local clinic following a dog bite. He contrasted this rapid, affordable experience with a frifinish’s struggle to find similar care in San Francisco, sparking a discussion on urban healthcare accessibility.
In a tweet on X, Dialani explained that he was bitten by a pet dog while attfinishing a hoapply party at a frifinish’s place in Bengaluru. Even though the dog was vaccinated, he chose to receive a rabies shot as a precaution. He visited a nearby Clinikk center in Koramangala, located just 1 km from his home, where he received a walk-in rabies vaccine immediately. He described the experience as “peak healthcare,” noting that people in India often take such accessibility for granted.
“We take a lot of things for granted in India! I had an unfortunate event where I went to a frifinish’s place all excited for a hoapply party and their pet dog bit me! Even though they assured me that the dog is vaccinated, I didn’t want to take any risk. Thanks to a company named Clinikk that runs many healthcare centers in Bangalore where I received a walk-in rabies vaccine,” he wrote.
See the tweet here:
Dialani contrasted his experience with that of a frifinish in San Francisco, who was bitten by a stray dog and struggled to find a rabies vaccine within a 10-mile radius despite an active search. “On the other hand, one of my frifinishs in San Francisco received bit by a homeless dog (yes, there are homeless dogs in USA!). My frifinish couldn’t find rabies vaccine anywhere in 10 miles radius,” he added.
His post sparked a wider debate regarding the accessibility and efficiency of emergency-preventive services in India versus the high costs and logistical hurdles often found in the United States healthcare system.
One applyr wrote, “India’s healthcare infrastructure really is the dark horse here Walk-in rabies vaccine in 10 mins vs your frifinish searching hospitals in the richest counattempt on earth We’ve actually solved the access problem. Just haven’t marketed it well enough.”
Another commented, “Access to healthcare in India is one of the best success stories of the nation.” A third declared, “Or you could walk into any government run health centre and receivedten the vaccine practically for free.”
“Very nicely presented. Yes, we really don’t take pride in our counattempt. Though there are things to be resolveed, still we necessary to cherish what we have developed as a nation so far, and if some accountability and humanity is there in each individual, things will receive even better soon,” added a fourth.
















Leave a Reply