Psychological Consequences of Whistleblower Retaliation in India’s Healthcare Sector: A Forensic Qualitative Study

Authors

  • Ved Ashish Nanoty Ramniranjan Jhunjhunwala College, University of Mumbai
  • Anshnu Tyagi National Forensic Sciences University, Delhi Campus

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37506/gy6bpp92

Abstract

Whistleblowing in India’s healthcare sector involves significant personal, professional, and psychological risk. While legal frameworks like the Whistleblower Protection Act (2014) exist, the emotional and mental health consequences of retaliation remain under-researched, particularly through forensic psychological and culturally informed lenses. This qualitative study explores the psychological impact of whistleblower retaliation among healthcare professionals across government, private, and semi-government institutions. Grounded in a constructivist paradigm, the study employed semi-structured, in-person interviews with 20 participants, including doctors, nurses, interns, administrators, and allied health workers selected through purposive and snowball sampling.
Using Braun and Clarke’s (2006) thematic analysis, six key themes emerged: psychological impact, forms of retaliation, barriers to whistleblowing, institutional silence and mental health apathy, coping strategies, and reform recommendations. Participants reported symptoms such as anxiety, depression, insomnia, emotional withdrawal, and somatic distress, often shaped by cultural values of obedience, hierarchy, and shame. The study introduces two novel constructs, shame-based silencing and learned despair, to describe trauma responses stemming from institutional betrayal and social invalidation.
Findings highlight a lack of effective support systems, with grievance mechanisms seen as performative and mental health services perceived as inaccessible or biased. Forensic psychology offers a lens to reframe whistleblowers not as threats but as morally driven individuals in need of empathy, protection, and trauma-informed care. The study calls for urgent, culturally sensitive reforms in policy, training, and mental health infrastructure, positioning psychological well-being as essential to ethical governance in healthcare.

Author Biographies

  • Ved Ashish Nanoty, Ramniranjan Jhunjhunwala College, University of Mumbai

    Psychology Graduate, Ramniranjan Jhunjhunwala College, University of Mumbai

  • Anshnu Tyagi, National Forensic Sciences University, Delhi Campus

    First-Year B.Sc–M.Sc. Forensic Science, National Forensic Sciences University, Delhi Campus

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Published

2025-09-25

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How to Cite

Psychological Consequences of Whistleblower Retaliation in India’s Healthcare Sector: A Forensic Qualitative Study. (2025). Medico Legal Update, 25(4), 22-33. https://doi.org/10.37506/gy6bpp92