Doctor Used Industrial Adhesive on 2-Year-Old’s Head Instead of Stitches—Infection Spreads, Child Hospitalized
- Sabana Yesmin
- 20 Nov, 2025
§ Child suffered head injury while playing
§ Doctor claimed stitches unnecessary
§ Applied Fevicol directly to wound
§ NO antiseptic preparation beforehand
§ Within hours infection, swelling, severe pain
§ Child transferred to another hospital
§ Proper treatment required
Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, November 20, 2025: A disturbing case of alleged medical negligence has surfaced in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, exposing dangerous gaps in hospital quality control and professional accountability. A private hospital physician reportedly used industrial adhesive—Fevicol—directly on a two-year-old child’s head wound without employing standard antiseptic procedures or surgical stitching techniques. The decision resulted in rapid infection spread and necessitated emergency transfer to another hospital for proper treatment.
The incident has triggered sharp criticism from medical professionals, law enforcement intervention and concerns about patient safety standards in private healthcare facilities across India’s most populous state.
The Incident: Child Injured, Doctor Chooses Unconventional Treatment
The medical emergency began ordinarily. A two-year-old child sustained a head injury while playing at home in Meerut. Blood loss prompted immediate family action—parents rushed the child to a nearby private hospital seeking emergency care.
Upon arrival, the hospital’s physician examined the wound. Rather than applying standard medical protocols—cleaning with antiseptic solution, assessing wound depth and cleanliness and employing surgical sutures when necessary—the doctor implemented an extraordinary approach. According to the family’s complaint, the physician announced that surgical stitching was unnecessary.
Instead, the doctor claimed that applying adhesive would suffice to seal the wound. What followed was shocking: the physician applied Fevicol—an industrial-grade adhesive designed for bonding paper, plastic and wood products—directly onto the child’s open head wound. According to the family, no antiseptic preparation occurred before this application.
Consequences: Rapid Infection, Emergency Hospitalization, Family Distress
The consequences manifested rapidly. Within hours of the adhesive application, the child developed burning sensations at the wound site. Visible swelling emerged. The child experienced severe pain and distress.
Recognizing the deteriorating condition, the family transported the child to another hospital for evaluation. Medical professionals at the second facility immediately identified contamination. The adhesive application, combined with the absence of antiseptic preparation and the direct exposure to non-sterile conditions, had created a contamination event. Infection had begun spreading through the wound.
The attending physicians at the second hospital conveyed urgency: immediate treatment was necessary to prevent infection escalation and more serious complications. The child required proper wound cleaning, antiseptic treatment and potentially surgical intervention to address the contamination.
Medical Perspective: Fevicol is Industrial Product, Not Medical Treatment
The decision to apply Fevicol to a human wound has generated intense criticism within medical circles. Multiple physicians have emphasized a critical point: Fevicol is not medical treatment—it’s an industrial chemical designed for bonding non-organic materials.
“Fevicol is a synthetic adhesive designed for paper, plastic and wood materials,” explains a physician interviewed about the incident. “It absolutely should never be applied to human skin or wounds. This is not medical practice—it’s dangerous misuse of a toxic substance.”
Medical professionals emphasize multiple protocol violations present in this incident:
· First violation: No antiseptic preparation. Standard wound treatment requires cleaning with appropriate disinfectant solutions to eliminate bacteria and contaminants before any closure method—whether sutures, staples or medical-grade adhesive.
· Second violation: Use of non-medical adhesive. Medical protocols specify surgical-grade materials for wound closure. Industrial adhesives contain compounds unsuitable for human tissue contact.
· Third violation: Apparent absence of infection control measures. No mention exists of sterile field maintenance or aseptic technique during the alleged application.
· Fourth violation: Inadequate informed consent. No indication suggests the family received explanation of the unusual treatment or agreed to non-standard protocols.
Hospital Response: Deflection and Denial
Hospital administration has responded to criticism by distancing itself from responsibility. Officials announced that the physician in question was a contractual employee—implying limited institutional accountability.
“We had no knowledge of this physician employing such methods,” hospital representatives claimed. “His conduct violates our standards and institutional policies.”
However, this response raises its own concerns. If a physician can employ dangerous, non-standard practices without institutional detection or intervention, it suggests inadequate quality control, insufficient clinical supervision and weak mechanisms for monitoring treatment protocols.
Legal Action: Police Investigation and Regulatory Scrutiny
The family filed formal complaints with local police authorities. Law enforcement officials confirmed that investigations have commenced. Police indicated that preliminary findings suggest professional misconduct and that appropriate legal action will follow conclusion of investigations.
“We are treating this matter seriously,” police officials stated. “If investigations confirm the allegations, appropriate charges will be filed against the responsible physician.”
The case has attracted attention from Uttar Pradesh’s health department. Senior officials have acknowledged the severity of the allegations. One health official indicated that if investigations prove the allegations, the physician’s medical license could face cancellation alongside criminal prosecution.
Systemic Issues: Quality Control in Private Healthcare
This incident illustrates broader concerns about quality control in India’s private healthcare sector. Private hospitals operate with varying degrees of oversight compared to government facilities. While many private institutions maintain excellent standards, others—particularly smaller facilities—may lack robust quality assurance mechanisms.
· Key concerns include,
o Inadequate supervision: Many private hospitals employ contractual physicians without consistent direct supervision of treatment protocols.
o Insufficient quality review: Limited systems exist to audit clinical decisions or identify deviations from standard protocols.
o Weak accountability structures: Minimal mechanisms often exist to investigate complaints or prevent recurrence of problematic practices.
o Inadequate training: Some physicians may work in settings without mandatory continuing education or protocol reinforcement.
Regulatory Framework: Existing Protections and Gaps
India’s medical regulatory system includes multiple layers designed to protect patients,
· Medical Council oversight: The Medical Council of India and state councils regulate physician conduct and maintain licensing standards. Misconduct can result in license suspension or cancellation.
· Consumer protection: India’s Consumer Protection Act permits patients to file complaints and seek compensation for medical negligence.
· Criminal law: Indian Penal Code sections address causing death or injury through negligence (IPC 304A and related provisions).
However, practitioners and patient advocates consistently note significant gaps. Investigations often proceed slowly. Compensation cases may take years or decades. Regulatory bodies sometimes lack resources for thorough investigations. Legal standards for establishing negligence can be difficult for laypeople to understand and prove.
Medical Ethics Questions: Professional Accountability and Public Trust
This incident raises fundamental questions about medical ethics and professional accountability. When physicians deviate dramatically from established protocols, what mechanisms should trigger immediate intervention.? How can healthcare systems detect and prevent such deviations.?
Medical ethicists emphasize that patient trust forms the foundation of effective healthcare. When physicians employ dangerous, non-standard practices, it undermines community confidence in medical professionals broadly.
“Physicians hold positions of public trust,” notes a medical ethics commentator. “When that trust is violated through reckless deviations from established standards, it damages confidence in healthcare systems overall. This requires accountability mechanisms that work effectively and promptly.”
Child’s Condition and Prognosis
Details regarding the child’s current condition remain limited as treatment continues. However, if proper antibiotics and wound care commence promptly, prognosis for recovery from infection generally remains favorable in pediatric cases.
The incident nonetheless represents traumatic experience for the child and family—exposure to harmful treatment followed by emergency medical intervention.
Broader Pattern: Medical Negligence Cases Increasing in India
This Meerut incident occurs within context of rising medical negligence cases across India. Data from consumer protection bodies, medical councils and courts indicate increasing litigation, formal complaints and criminal charges against healthcare professionals.
Some cases involve genuine errors within contexts of appropriate care efforts. Others, like this Meerut case, suggest fundamental departures from professional standards.
This trend has generated dual consequences: increased pressure on healthcare professionals (with some experiencing depression, stress and in extreme cases, suicide following accusations) and genuine concerns about patient safety gaps.
Conclusions: Systemic Reform Needed
The Meerut incident underscores several critical needs
· Enhanced quality control: Private hospitals require robust systems monitoring treatment protocols and identifying deviations.
· Strengthened oversight: Regulatory bodies need resources and authority for prompt investigation of complaints.
· Physician accountability: Clear mechanisms must exist to investigate misconduct and prevent license abuse.
· Patient education: Patients require better information enabling them to identify when treatments deviate from standard protocols.
· Systemic transparency: Healthcare facilities should maintain transparent practices with accessible quality measures and complaint mechanisms.
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