Abstract The Indian healthcare system is witnessing a paradoxical crisis. While investments in primary healthcare infrastructure have increased, patient footfall patterns reveal a disturbing trend: nearly two-thirds of rural patients “bypass” their local primary care physicians to seek treatment at tertiary centers. This editorial analyzes the root causes of this “Bypass Culture,” posits that health policy often confuses Potential Access (infrastructure) with Realized Access (utilization). It is argued that while the “hardware” of healthcare (buildings) has been installed, the “software” (trust and relationships) remains notably absent. To restore the Family Physician as the effective gatekeeper, the gap in “Cultural Distance” must be bridged as effectively as the geographical one.
Pratyush Kumar (Mon,) studied this question.