Dr.Ashish Jung Thapa - Neurosurgeon

Dr.Ashish Jung Thapa - Neurosurgeon Minimal Invasive Brain & Spine Surgery
( MS, FMIBSS, IFAANS )

Happy World Neurosurgeons Day..Neurosurgeon's Diaries: 1. Total Excision of D9-D11 IDEM followed by 2. Rt. Cerebellar Me...
08/04/2026

Happy World Neurosurgeons Day..

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: 1. Total Excision of D9-D11 IDEM followed by 2. Rt. Cerebellar Meningioma (Rt. Retrosigmoid craniotomy and Simpson I excision of Meningioma)...... ... ...

15/03/2026

Milestone Alert: A decade and a half in Neurosurgery going from a young House Officer knowing nothing about Neurosurgery through Residency, fellowships & trainings and today working as a Senior Consultant Neurosurgeon at the same center where everything began... First of all, I would like to thank all my patients for believing in me for their treatment without them this journey wouldnt have been this easy...Next I would like to thank all the great mentors whose teaching has shaped me and my career that I am today... Special mention to late Prof. Devkota sir for planting Neurosurgical seed in me during my childhood... Last but not the least I am grateful to my dear wife who has always stood beside me in all these ups and downs and making this journey more easy... Countless sleepless nights, Hours of Surgeries, many failures throughout are the best teachers I have encountered... This 15 years of journey sounds just as a beginning of a long career ahead and I promise to put into the same dedication, enthusiasm, learning, respect and love towards my profession, my patients.

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: 1. MIS(Endoscopic ICH evacuation)...2. Decompression and Short Segment Fixation post traumatic L...
11/03/2026

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: 1. MIS(Endoscopic ICH evacuation)...2. Decompression and Short Segment Fixation post traumatic L3 Fracture... .... ...

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Left Pterional Craniotomy and Microsurgical clipping of Large ruptured Acom Aneurysm..... .... ....
08/03/2026

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Left Pterional Craniotomy and Microsurgical clipping of Large ruptured Acom Aneurysm..... .... ..

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Left Pterional Craniotomy and Clipping of Acom Aneurysm... ...  .....
27/02/2026

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Left Pterional Craniotomy and Clipping of Acom Aneurysm... ... .....

24/02/2026

Today's sad reality.....

We are not losing doctors to money.
We are losing them to emotional exhaustion.

A few years ago, a fellow in my unit quit medicine.

Top ranker. Gold medalist. Brilliant hands.

He did not fail.

He walked away.

He joined an MBA program.

When I asked him why, he said something I will never forget:

“Sir, I can handle long hours. I cannot handle losing people and then being blamed for it.”

Another story.

A junior doctor I knew did not quit.

He died.

By su***de.

After months of relentless ICU duty, litigation threats from a patient’s family, and public humiliation on social media.

There was no headline.

No panel discussion.

No prime-time outrage.

Just a quiet funeral.

And a department that moved on the next morning.

A third one.

A surgeon in his 40s. Successful. Established.

One complication.

Not negligence. Not recklessness. A complication.

It spiraled into legal notices, online abuse, and political interference.

He now runs a wellness retreat in the hills.

He says he sleeps better.

He says he feels lighter.

He says he does not miss the operating room.

That sentence should terrify us.

We keep telling ourselves the system is fine.

It is not.

Across India. Across the UK. Across the US.

Doctors are leaving clinical medicine.

Some go into administration.

Some into startups.

Some into pharma.

Some into tech.

Some into complete silence.

And some into graves.

We do not talk about that enough.

Medicine demands competence.

But it survives on emotional resilience.

And that resilience is being crushed.

Not just by workload.

By distrust.

By constant suspicion.

By the assumption that if an outcome is bad, someone must be guilty.

By the idea that doctors must be perfect in an imperfect biological system.

We are trained to fight death.

We are not trained to fight public outrage every time biology wins.

Here is what scares me.

When the best doctors leave, it is not dramatic.

It is silent.

Residency seats go vacant.

Departments become transactional.

Young doctors stop taking high-risk cases.

Defensive medicine rises.

Compassion shrinks.

Risk-taking disappears.

And slowly, the system becomes average.

Not because doctors became less capable.

Because they became less willing.

I have seen brilliant residents say:

“I would rather build a company.”

“I would rather do consulting.”

“I would rather move abroad.”

“I would rather do anything but this.”

These are not lazy people.

They are tired people.

Tired of carrying outcomes that were never fully in their control.

Tired of being heroes in pandemics and villains in peacetime.

Tired of being called greedy for charging fees that barely match the emotional cost.

And when a doctor dies by su***de, the conversation lasts 48 hours.

Then we return to normal.

As if nothing is wrong.

But something is very wrong.

Because when healers start breaking at scale, it is not an individual weakness.

It is systemic strain.

If you are a doctor reading this, you know.

You know the quiet replay after a bad case.

You know the insomnia.

You know the smile you wear in front of patients.

You know the fear of one mistake defining your career.

You know the emotional math you do every night.

Stay or leave.

Fight or fold.

Care deeply or detach completely.

We are not losing doctors because they cannot survive medicine.

We are losing them because medicine is becoming emotionally unsafe.

And when that happens, the cost is not borne by doctors alone.

It is borne by society.

Because the next generation is watching.

And they are asking a simple question:

“Is this worth it?”

If the answer becomes no…

the shortage will not be numerical.

It will be moral.

Doctors are not murderers.

They are humans who are burning out quietly.

And unless we acknowledge that truth, the system will keep losing its best people.



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𝐅𝐫𝐨𝐦 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐀𝐮𝐭𝐡𝐨𝐫s 𝐨𝐟 '𝐃𝐨𝐜𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐬 𝐀𝐫𝐞 𝐍𝐨𝐭 𝐌𝐮𝐫𝐝𝐞𝐫𝐞𝐫𝐬' & 'Dear People, With Love And Care, Your Doctors
By dr debraj shome sir

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Pterional craniotomy and microsurgical Clipping of ICA large bilobed aneurysm... .. .... ....
04/02/2026

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Pterional craniotomy and microsurgical Clipping of ICA large bilobed aneurysm...
.. .... ....

Neurosurgeon's Diaries Late Post: 1. MIS.. Endoscopic ICH evacuation...2. D12-L1 Microscopic IDEM excision 3. Post traum...
21/01/2026

Neurosurgeon's Diaries Late Post: 1. MIS.. Endoscopic ICH evacuation...2. D12-L1 Microscopic IDEM excision 3. Post traumatic Delayed ACF defect with encephalocele and CSF rhinorrhea repaired surgically... ..... ... ...

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Late post Post traumatic C5 subluxation with ASIA A neurology... 2. MIS-Endoscopic ICH evacuatio...
13/01/2026

Neurosurgeon's Diaries: Late post Post traumatic C5 subluxation with ASIA A neurology... 2. MIS-Endoscopic ICH evacuation...

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Neuro Cardio & Multispeciality Hospital
Biratnagar
56613

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