Indian-Origin Physician Dr Nisha Patel Blasts Gynecologists in Epstein Scandal
In a powerful social media statement, Indian-origin doctor Dr Nisha Patel has launched a scathing critique of the gynecologists allegedly utilized by financier Jeffrey Epstein to treat his victims. Patel asserted that these medical professionals not only failed in their duty to medicine but also betrayed fundamental human ethics by enabling exploitation.
"You Failed Medicine and Humanity"
Dr Patel's blistering post left no room for ambiguity. "Who the hell were these gynecologists treating Epstein’s victims?" she demanded. "Because let’s be crystal clear, if you were a physician and you ignored, enabled, minimized, or looked the other way while children were being abused, you failed medicine, you failed ethics, and you failed humanity."
She explicitly rejected any potential defense of merely "just doing your job," emphasizing that such reasoning holds no validity when children are being exploited. "Licenses don’t cancel mandatory reporting," Patel wrote, adding that all involved physicians "should be ashamed of yourselves."
Unverified Diary and Medical Revelations
The controversy deepens with newly released documents, including a 2012 email to Epstein asking, "Do you remember the name of the Gynecologist that you used to send your victims to?" While the sender's name was redacted, social media speculation points to Epstein's brother Mark as the probable author.
Further allegations emerge from an unverified diary entry, where a woman claims she served as a "human incubator" for Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, with her newborn child immediately taken from her around 2002 when she was approximately 16-17 years old. The Department of Justice has cautioned that these files may contain unverified or fabricated materials, and the accusations have been disputed in court proceedings.
Epstein's Medical Records Surface
The document trove also reveals startling medical information about Jeffrey Epstein himself. Medical reports indicate his testosterone levels were consistently low, dropping from 142 in 2014 to 125 by 2017, as communicated by his physician. These details add another layer to the complex medical dimensions of the case.
Dr Nisha Patel's condemnation highlights the ongoing ethical reckoning within the medical community regarding complicity in abuse cases, underscoring that professional obligations must never override moral imperatives to protect the vulnerable.
