CHANDIGARH — NATIONAL MEDICAL CHRONICLE
In a landmark decision that brings profound relief to the public healthcare workforce, the Punjab and Haryana High Court has stayed the Haryana government’s contentious order suspending four government doctors over a decline in regional sex ratios. Delivering a stern check to bureaucratic overreach, Justice Sandeep Moudgil ordered the immediate reinstatement of the medical officers to their original posts. The court ruled that clinical administrators cannot be held singularly liable for deeply entrenched socioeconomic imbalances.
The judicial intervention halts severe disciplinary proceedings initiated on May 18, 2026, by Haryana’s Health Department. This development establishes a significant legal precedent against the systemic scapegoating of medical professionals for societal failures.
The Genesis of the Confrontation
The legal conflict began when the Additional Chief Secretary (Health) for Haryana, Dr. Sumita Misra, issued immediate suspension notices to four doctors. The administrative action targeted four doctors, including SMOs Dr. Tina Anand, Dr. Vijay Parmar, Dr. Satpal, and MO Dr. Prabha.
The department also initiated punitive actions under Rule 7 of the Haryana Civil Services Rules, 2016. The state blamed the doctors for “poor performance” and a failure to monitor the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act guidelines. This crackdown followed reports that Haryana’s Sex Ratio at Birth (SRB) dropped to 895 girls per 1,000 boys during the first four months of 2026.
