logo
'Not real doctors'? Chess Grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi fires back in viral Doctor's Day spat

'Not real doctors'? Chess Grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi fires back in viral Doctor's Day spat

Time of India2 days ago
Image credits: X/@TheKhelIndia
Indian Chess Grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi has recently been making headlines for his viral spat with a doctor on X. The 30-year-old chess player recently took to X to wish his family a happy National Doctor's Day on July 1st.
A social media user with the handle 'TheLiverDoc' commented on Gujrathi's post that none of his family members were "really doctors." Ever since, the two have been engaged in an online verbal war that seems to have no end.
On July 1st, Gujrathi posted a photo of his family on X writing, "Happy Doctor's Day to my entire family." When asked about the medical specialities of his family members by a person in the comments, he revealed that his father is an Ayurvedic migraine specialist, his wife is an MD Homoeopathy, his mom practices cosmetology and his sister is a physiotherapist.
Sometime later, 'TheLiverDoc' reposted Gujrathi's post writing, "I am sorry but none of them are really doctors."
Gujrathi responded strongly to the comment writing, Your entire brand and personality is built on insulting others. While you chase retweets by tearing people down, my family quietly heals lives without needing a spotlight. They've helped more people than your ego can count. Stay in your lane. And for a change, try being useful."
'TheLiverDoc' who claimed to be a certified internist with a doctorate in hepatology and liver transplant medicine then took to the social media platform to pen a detailed response clarifying that he meant no offence to the chess player's family and was making a point from a professional standpoint.
He explained how Doctor's Day is celebrated as the birth and death anniversary of Dr Bidhan Chandra Roy, one of India's most revered physicians and how the practitioners of
Ayurveda
, Homeopathy, Cosmetology and Physiotherapy are not "clinical physicians" and the practices themselves are not "realistic clinical medicine."
He added how Gujrathi's ignorance of science and health affects the public perception of realistic healthcare and pseudoscientific practices, adding that the medicines he mentioned were "alternate medicine" that is not proven to work.
The man clarified his credentials adding that he has 260 peer-reviewed scientific publications, 4400 citations, and an h-index of 30. "Calling out medical misinformation is what I do apart from being a full-time doctor.
I suggest you stay in your lane and discuss more on chess. Sorry for the checkmate. And for a change, talk about chess and try being useful. All the best for your future matches," ended the man.
Social media reactions
Image credits: X/@theliverdr
People on X have been commenting under TheLiverDoc's post condemning his comments on Gujrathi's family and on Ayurveda not being a medicinal practice.
"Original healing science of India since ancient times is Ayurveda. Homoeopathy is modern day Ayurveda.
Allopathy is a fraud science of which you are a practitioner," wrote a man to TheLiverDoc.
"Which "medicines" existed before "science" came to play?" probed another.
"Someone celebrates their birthday on X.
They: 'Woohoo! Goodbye 30, hello 31!' 🎉
TL Doctor: I am sorry, but you are nearing death. There is nothing scientific about it - just Earth doing another lap around the sun." quipped another X user.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pharma sector set for 11% YoY growth in Q1FY26 driven by global momentum: Report
Pharma sector set for 11% YoY growth in Q1FY26 driven by global momentum: Report

Hans India

time37 minutes ago

  • Hans India

Pharma sector set for 11% YoY growth in Q1FY26 driven by global momentum: Report

Pharmaceutical companies in India are projected to deliver an 11% year-on-year (YoY) growth in both sales and EBITDA for the first quarter of FY26, according to a recent report by Kotak Institutional Equities. The growth is expected to be driven by sustained momentum across key international markets, despite slightly muted domestic demand in April and March. The hospital segment is also expected to shine with a robust 17% YoY increase in sales and EBITDA, attributed to increased patient footfalls, capacity expansions through new bed additions, and a modest improvement in Average Revenue Per Occupied Bed (ARPOB). Diagnostics players are forecast to see a 14% growth in sales, fueled by higher volumes, an improved service mix, and mergers and acquisitions activity. The Indian pharmaceutical market was valued at USD 50 billion in FY24, with domestic consumption contributing USD 23.5 billion and exports accounting for USD 26.5 billion. India continues to hold its place as the world's third-largest pharmaceutical producer by volume and 14th by value. The industry's portfolio spans generic and bulk drugs, OTC products, vaccines, biosimilars, and biologics. As per the National Accounts Statistics 2024, published by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, the pharmaceutical sector's total output stood at ₹4.56 lakh crore for FY23 at constant prices, with ₹1.75 lakh crore as value added. With over 9.25 lakh people employed in the sector during FY23, the Indian government has been actively promoting pharmaceutical innovation. The Department of Pharmaceuticals has set up seven National Institutes of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (NIPERs) to foster advanced research and academic excellence. To accelerate innovation, the department has also rolled out the National Policy on R&D and Innovation in the Pharma-MedTech Sector, aimed at nurturing an entrepreneurial ecosystem and positioning India as a global leader in drug discovery and medical device development.

Vaccine hesitancy - India hesitancy: Two sides of the same dangerous coin
Vaccine hesitancy - India hesitancy: Two sides of the same dangerous coin

India Today

timean hour ago

  • India Today

Vaccine hesitancy - India hesitancy: Two sides of the same dangerous coin

Vaccine hesitancy has a long history. Initially, vaccines were opposed on religious grounds, viewed as interference with divine will. Later, in liberal societies, they were resisted as infringements on personal freedom, especially when made modern times, the anti-vaccine movement gained steam from 1998 through a widely publicised study by Dr. Andrew Wakefield that falsely linked the MMR (Measles, Mumps and Rubella) vaccine to autism. Wakefield overlooked the crucial fact that autism often manifests around the same age at which the MMR vaccine is administered. Driven by the distress and assumptions of some parents who misread the timing of autism's onset as being triggered by the vaccine, Wakefield arrived at a deeply flawed conclusion. The study was later debunked and retracted, and Wakefield was discredited; however, the damage was lasting, fuelling vaccine suspicion, lowering immunisation rates, and contributing to outbreaks of preventable diseases, such as recent decades, vaccine resistance was further inflamed by conspiracy theories that framed vaccines as mere tools of profiteering corporations. During COVID, these historical strands of vaccine hesitancy - religious conservatism, libertarianism, and conspiracism - merged into a potent blend of distrust, politicisation, and misinformation, stoking a global wave of vaccine resistance that led to preventable illness and death across a similar blend of scientific distortion and political opportunism is evident in Karnataka's Chief Minister Siddaramaiah's recent tweets. Without offering any credible evidence, he hinted at a connection between the COVID-19 vaccines and a rise in heart attacks. His language - posing questions rather than making claims outright - mirrors a now-familiar strategy: sow doubt while evading responsibility. Like Wakefield, Siddaramaiah appears driven not by science, but by a confluence of ideology, misperception, and political is both striking and encouraging is that, this time, several prominent Indian industrialists have pushed back decisively against such misinformation. In a landscape where business leaders often tread cautiously amid political currents, their clarity is commendable. Foremost among them is Biocon's Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, a rare business voice known for calling a spade a spade. She has long advocated for constructive criticism in India's industry-government interface, even echoing Rahul Bajaj's concerns that government criticism is often mislabelled as 'anti-national.' Despite her history of critiquing the regulatory process on occasions, she came out strongly in defense of India's vaccine oversight. Countering Siddaramaiah's charge of hasty approval and distribution, she tweeted:'COVID-19 vaccines developed in India were approved under the Emergency Use Authorisation framework, following rigorous protocols aligned with global standards for safety and efficacy. To suggest that these vaccines were 'hastily' approved is factually incorrect and contributes to public misinformation.'Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw articulated her response with precision, crafting it to be nearly unassailable and preempting any credible counterattack. So did Pankaj Bhai Patel, Dilip Shanghvi, Satish Reddy, and Sudarshan Jain. AIIMS and other leading institutions also convincingly defended the safety and efficacy of the vaccines, citing large-scale clinical trials and real-world data collected over millions of doses. The broader scientific community has reinforced this by pointing out that India's vaccines have not only protected its own people but were also supplied to over 70 countries, helping bridge global vaccine what makes this moment more troubling is that Siddaramaiah's anti-science insinuations are not isolated. Internationally, figures like Robert F. Kennedy Jr., US Secretary of Health and Human Sevices, continue to push vaccine skepticism - not as scientists, but as political actors. RFK Jr.'s crusade is rooted in libertarian distrust of federal institutions and often veers into conspiracy theory. More insidiously, Siddaramaiah's comments appear not only to undermine vaccines, but to subtly discredit the Indian scientific establishment, turning a global public health issue into a domestic political weapon. His sludge is thus not just anti-science - it edges toward being the establishment and Modi are near-synonymous today, attacking Indian institutions often doubles as an attack on Modi. Modi's opponents in India ask: why cut Modi slack when he's been ruthlessly below the belt with us? India is navigating a complex and competitive world where credibility, not partisanship, determines influence. Defending our institutions in this moment is not about giving anyone political cover - it's about protecting India's long-term standing and scientific supplies 60% of the world's vaccines and has done so reliably, safely, and at scale. At a time when the country is positioning itself as a trusted health partner to the world, amid shifting geopolitical and geo-commercial landscapes, ill-considered, uninformed criticism from within can do more damage than we realise. This is not the time to erode trust in one of India's most respected global contributions. It is time to defend must always be open to scrutiny, and governments must be held accountable. But there is a difference between honest inquiry and opportunistic delegitimisation. The former strengthens democracy and public health; the latter corrodes both. At a time when India is under external pressure and internal strain, spreading unsubstantiated fears erodes public trust and weakens our shared an age where trust is as critical as innovation, we must not only defend our science - we must stand behind those who uphold it, at home and on the world stage.(Pavan Choudary is the Chairman of the Medical Technology Association of India (MTaI) and a Public Intellectual)- Ends(Views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author)Must Watch

7 benefits of a bowl of cucumber and 7 healthy recipes
7 benefits of a bowl of cucumber and 7 healthy recipes

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

7 benefits of a bowl of cucumber and 7 healthy recipes

There's something incredibly satisfying about crunching into a bowl of freshly chopped cucumber. Light, juicy, and cooling, this humble veggie is more powerful than it looks. Whether you slice it, dice it, or blend it, cucumber has a way of making you feel refreshed from the inside out. Especially in our hot and humid climate, it feels less like a vegetable and more like a natural way to beat the heat. What's great is that it doesn't need fancy prep or exotic pairings. Just a few simple tweaks and it turns into a mini health booster. Here's why a bowl of cucumber deserves a spot on your daily plate, along with some quick ways to enjoy it without getting bored. What study says? According to a study by ResearchGate, cucumber is full of water, fibre, potassium, magnesium, and vitamins A, C, and K, making it great for hydration, digestion, and weight control. It has antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory powers that soothe the skin, ease acidity, and support gut health. The study also shows cucumber helps manage blood pressure and sugar levels. Its seeds and juice are rich in flavonoids and lignans, which may protect the body from infections and long-term diseases. Eating it regularly can also reduce puffiness, cool the body in heat, and ease stomach discomfort. Keeps your body cool Cucumber is loaded with water, so it naturally hydrates you from the inside. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 선납금 보증금 없이 딱 2년만 먼저 타보고 인수 반납 자유롭게 가능합니다. 오토모빌리티 더 알아보기 Undo It's the perfect thing to munch on after coming back from the sun or post-workout. Your skin, stomach, and mood all feel the difference when you're well hydrated. Good for skin There's a reason cucumber is placed on tired eyes. When you eat it, it hydrates your skin, reduces puffiness and helps that glow come back. Its nutrients support collagen and improve skin texture. It also works from the inside to fight dullness. Helps digestion The tiny seeds inside cucumber act like natural aids for your digestion. The fibre keeps things moving smoothly, while the water content calms acidity and bloating. It's one of the easiest ways to feel lighter without doing much. Lowers cravings Cucumber keeps you full without making you feel heavy. If you're craving something salty and crunchy, a bowl of cucumber with black salt or chat masala hits the spot. It's low in calories yet packed with flavour, making it a refreshing and healthy snack you can enjoy anytime. Supports weight loss If you're looking to lose a few kilos, cucumber is your best friend. It's low in calories but high in water and fibre, which helps you feel full for longer. Add it to salads, mix it with curd, or dip it in hummus and it turns into a satisfying, weight-friendly meal. Balances body heat In Ayurveda, cucumber is known to reduce pitta or internal heat. Especially in the summer, a bowl a day helps cool the body naturally and keeps headaches, acne and irritability at bay. Cleanses your system It acts like a gentle internal cleanser. All that water and fibre work together to flush out toxins, reduce water retention and make you feel fresher. You get all the detox benefits without doing anything extreme. Simple recipes to try Classic cucumber raita Grate fresh cucumber into a bowl of chilled curd for an instant cooler. Add roasted cumin powder, a pinch of salt, and chopped coriander for flavour. This simple raita is soothing, refreshing, and pairs perfectly with spicy dishes. It also aids digestion and keeps your body cool in warm weather. Cucumber lemon detox water Slice cucumber into a jug of cold water for a refreshing twist. Add lemon wedges and mint leaves to boost flavour and freshness. Let it sit for a while to infuse. Sip it through the day to stay hydrated, improve digestion, and give your body a gentle detox naturally. Spicy cucumber salad Toss chopped cucumber with red chilli powder, a squeeze of lime juice, a pinch of salt, and crushed peanuts. This quick mix turns into a crunchy, tangy snack that's both refreshing and satisfying. It's light, flavourful, and perfect for hot days when you want something tasty without much effort. Cucumber mint chutney Blend fresh cucumber with mint leaves, green chilli, lemon juice, and a pinch of salt for a vibrant chutney. It's cool, zesty, and adds a burst of flavour to any meal. Serve it chilled with hot parathas or use it as a refreshing dip for snacks and roasted dishes. Chilled cucumber soup Puree cucumber with chilled curd, a clove of garlic, and a dash of olive oil until smooth. Let it sit in the fridge to cool completely. This clean summer soup is light, creamy, and perfect for hot days. It soothes the stomach while keeping you hydrated and energised. Cucumber moong dal salad Mix soaked moong dal with finely chopped cucumber, fresh grated coconut, tempered mustard seeds, and curry leaves. This South Indian-style salad is crunchy, light, and packed with plant protein. It's refreshing, easy to digest, and makes a perfect side dish or a quick lunch on a warm, busy day. Cucumber open sandwich Spread a thick layer of hummus on a slice of crisp toast. Top it with fresh cucumber slices and finish with a sprinkle of black sesame or flaxseeds. This quick open sandwich is crunchy, creamy, and full of texture. It makes for a wholesome, protein-rich snack or a light, refreshing breakfast.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store