PATIENTS ABANDONED: Shocking Video Call Reveals Japan’s Healthcare CRISIS Spreading to Remote Islands
A pharmacist stares into his screen. A patient listens hundreds of miles away across a treacherous sea. This isn’t a cutting-edge convenience—it’s a DANGEROUS last resort.
A leaked video call shows Kunihiro Nitta, 63, remotely dispensing medicine to a patient stranded on Minamidaito Island. The desperate resident is 360 kilometers from proper care. This intimate footage exposes a terrifying truth: Japan’s system is FAILING its most vulnerable.
“How are you feeling?” Nitta asks gently. But the quiet horror screams louder. This is the new normal. The government’s solution for remote communities isn’t doctors or clinics—it’s a PHARMACIST ON A SCREEN.
Who allows this? Officials who slash budgets. Corporations that profit from “tele-health” while real hospitals close. They are QUITE LITERALLY leaving people to die on islands, patching the holes with video calls and calling it “progress.”
Every smiling official who praises this “innovation” is guilty. Every silent medical association is complicit. This isn’t just about one island—it’s a test case for how far they can stretch a broken system before it SNAPS.
They are not healing the sick; they are managing their decline from a safe, comfortable distance.
Your healthcare is now a convenience to be streamed, if you’re lucky enough to have a signal at all.
Edited for Kayitsi.com



