Healthcare in March 2025: Oxygen Therapy, IVF, and Medical Tourism Insights

When thinking about healthcare, the system of medical services, treatments, and support available to people in India. Also known as medical care, it's not just about hospitals—it's about access, affordability, and trust. In March 2025, OxyGo India focused on what matters most: real people needing real help. Whether it’s someone struggling to breathe at home, a couple considering IVF, or a patient weighing surgery risks, the stories shared weren’t theoretical. They were lived.

One major theme was IVF treatment, a medical process that helps people conceive when natural methods fail. Also known as in-vitro fertilization, it came up again and again—not just as a procedure, but as an emotional, financial, and physical journey. Articles dug into how long it takes, what the hardest parts are, and even whether babies born from IVF can later conceive on their own. These aren’t just FAQs—they’re the quiet questions people whisper when no one else is listening. Then there’s medical tourism, when people travel to another state or country for better or cheaper care. Also known as health tourism, it’s not just about luxury clinics—it’s about families choosing between a local doctor and a city far away because the difference could mean life or death. And behind it all is oxygen therapy, a life-sustaining treatment for people with breathing problems, often used at home. Also known as supplemental oxygen, it’s not flashy, but for many in India, it’s the only thing standing between them and suffocation. Mental health came up too—not as a trend, but as a silent crisis. How many people need therapy but can’t get it? Why do so many avoid it because of shame or cost? These aren’t abstract stats. They’re neighbors, friends, siblings.

March 2025 didn’t just report on healthcare—it showed how broken parts of the system are, and where people are finding hope anyway. You’ll find articles on surgical mistakes in heart procedures, the truth about online prescriptions, Ayurvedic food rules, and even the rarest mental disorders you’ve never heard of. This isn’t a list of random topics. It’s a map of what real people in India are dealing with right now. Whether you’re looking for a better doctor, trying to understand your next step in fertility, or just trying to breathe easier, what follows isn’t just content. It’s what you need to know next.