Why the Golden Hour Fails So Often in Kashmir
By Dr. Nowsheen Jan
I write this as a doctor who has watched time decide outcomes more often than any drug or device.
Inside hospitals, we measure minutes with precision. Outside, those same minutes dissolve into confusion, panic, and well-meaning action without direction.
The Golden Hour, the first sixty minutes after a serious injury or sudden illness, often decides whether a person returns to the life they knew or steps into a future shaped by loss.
One recent evening on a Srinagar highway, a motorcycle crash unfolded with painful familiarity. Traffic slowed, vehicles stopped, and people gathered quickly, driven by concern and instinct.
Someone lifted the injured rider from the road. Another removed his helmet to check his breathing. A few voices debated responsibility. Calls went out, first to authorities, then for help.
An ambulance arrived later. Hospital care began nearly fifty minutes after impact, with most of the Golden Hour already spent at the roadside.
From a medical perspective, that sequence carried consequences far beyond the visible injuries.
The Golden Hour holds meaning grounded in biology rather than metaphor. Early intervention limits bleeding, protects the brain and spinal cord, supports breathing, and preserves organ function.
Delay allows swelling, oxygen deprivation, and internal damage to progress silently. Each passing minute shifts the body further away from recovery.
Scenes like this reflect human instinct rather than indifference.
People want to help. Hands move fast and voices overlap, but shock conceals the true extent of injury.
Moving a patient without stabilizing the neck risks spinal cord injury. Removing a helmet can compromise the airway and cervical spine. Offering water to........
