A great story. Laurie Montgomery and Jack Stapleton are back, though in a cursory role in this fast paced novel which uncovers a plot to discredit the Medical Tourism business in India and Asia.
A company has been set up to provide training and visas to Indian nurses to that they can get jobs in the US. But this was actually a front to gather data from the hospitals catering to rich foreigners who have come to India solely for the purpose of undergoing various surgical procedures at much more affordable and attractive rates.
When this company discovers that the actual success rates for surgery and post-op in India was outstanding they decide to opt for the unethical solution – create their own bad data for each of these hospitals, thereby discrediting the Medical Tourism business in India and Asia in general, which would guarantee an end result of Americans spending their hard earned money in the US itself instead of choosing cheaper options abroad.
The plot is fast paced and the suspense is spine-tingling. It starts off with the death of a medical student’s grandmother and the hospital forcing her to make a decision on the body – which in turn gets her hackles up. Upon dogged investigation and sheer luck, she stumbles upon two other similar cases and touches base with the grieving family.
Our favourite MEs – Laurie and Jack play only a cursory role in the drama as Laurie flies down to India with Jack in reluctant tow (owning to the fact that the couple is trying hard to get pregnant and can’t miss any opportunity during the fertility treatment).
For most of the book, Robin Cook’s research into India can clearly be seen. Care has been taken to describe even the small details with great accuracy.
The medical student dominates the plot – her character is well-rounded – intelligent, sharp and strong while still maintaining the usual human emotions as she is grieving for her beloved grandmother.
The hospital staff, while not the cause of the deaths, are still trying to cover their own behind and save face; such a response would definitely be expected, especially from a business that relies completely on the medical tourism business i.e. foreigners and their foreign currency.
The shell or fake company that provides training for the nurses are the bad guys here. And while the big bosses of the company are clearly without ethics what surprised me was the characters of the Indian nurses. This company had hired honest-to-God, hardworking, decent Indian nurses who all had ambitions of working in the US. None of them had any criminal records, and when the bosses hired them they did not consider any morally bankrupt individuals since the main purpose of the company was going to be the gathering of data from these hospitals regarding the failure rate. It had been assumed that failure rate and post-op infection would have been common in a third world country like India and the hospitals themselves were covering up the bad data. As this was not the case, the bosses of the fake company decide to use the same Indian nurses to act as angels of death in the hospitals to which they had been farmed out to.
I am quite confident that no matter how badly Indians want to work abroad, they would not have a complete change of character from good to evil and easily partake in murder as though it was commonly done by them. This portrayed Indians and Indian women in a bad light, especially since, nowadays Indian women are more empowered.
That aside, the story was gripping and a must read.