Why I Did Not Focus on “Corruption”, “Malpractices” or “Political Interference”

December 31, 2025

Healthcare, Education

When you read my books on healthcare, education, mental health, and geriatric care, you may notice something. I have not spent time blaming anyone. I have not pointed fingers at corruption, malpractices, or political interference. These topics are often discussed everywhere, but I chose a different path.

Let me explain why.

1. My Goal Is to Improve Processes, Not Punish Practices

When a machine is not working, the most helpful thing is to repair the system instead of shouting at the operator.

In the same way, our focus should be on making processes stronger:

  • Better workflows
  • Clearer responsibilities
  • Supportive technology
  • Smarter decision paths

If systems become clearer and more efficient, the space for wrongdoing automatically reduces. Good processes protect good people.

2. Blaming Makes People Defensive, Solutions Make People Participative

When we start by blaming individuals or groups, the conversation becomes heavy and emotional. People feel targeted. They shut down.

But when we say,
“Let us improve the process; let us fix the structure.”
it opens the door to collaboration.

No one feels attacked. Everyone can participate.

3. I Trust My Readers

I believe that my readers are mature and intelligent. They already know the ground reality. They don’t need another book that only complains. They want something that helps them think, imagine, and act.

My books are written for people who are ready to say:
“Yes, this is the problem… now what can we do?”

Final Thought

The purpose of my writing is simple:

  • Move the discussion from blame to building.
  • Turn frustration into direction.
  • Replace helplessness with intelligent action.

This is why I chose not to focus on corruption or politics. Instead, I chose to focus on solutions, processes, and practical steps.