Healthcare systems are supposed to be bastions of reason and science.
Yet, in the UK’s NHS, some doctors have chosen a different path – one where facts are optional, and conspiracy theories are mandatory.

These professionals publicly share antisemitic posts, endorse extremist narratives, and spread misinformation about global conflicts. And they do it openly, under the title “Dr.”
Patients trust them. Algorithms reward them. Institutions often look the other way.
The irony is brutal: a system that trains people not to trust “alternative medicine” now has to defend itself from the alternative realities its own staff produces.
Meanwhile, frontline healthcare workers struggle with shortages, overwork, and public mistrust, making it impossible to distinguish which is the greater illness – structural overload, or ideological infection from within.
Because when a doctor becomes a megaphone for propaganda, where else can a patient turn?
Perhaps soon, every NHS office will display a new warning next to the stethoscope: “Treatment does not apply to facts – only to opinions.”




