
Short answer for anyone searching for a Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu review of Amrit Hospital Moga: this is Zillion Media’s review of a real patient-family experience where a son took his mother to Amrit Hospital, Moga, for treatment and returned without surgery because staff asked him to sign a blank form before the details were filled.
This article records the honest conversation from both sides as it happened: what the patient’s son asked, what the reception staff said, and what Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu said during the ward round. Zillion Media verified the article facts directly with the son before publication, including the hospital name, doctor name, admission timeline, blank-form issue, billing issue, and the conversation recorded below.
The story is simple and serious. A son took his mother for a planned laparoscopic operation under Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu at Amrit Hospital Moga. He walked out because the doctor expected him to follow a process that was not legally safe or acceptable: signing a form at the bottom before patient details, procedure details, treatment charges, ward charges, and other terms were filled.
Why this process was not legally safe or acceptable: the official Charter of Patients’ Rights says patients and their representatives have rights to adequate information about proposed care, expected costs, access to detailed bills, and informed consent before specific treatment such as surgery. A blank form with key treatment and charge details empty at the time of signature goes against that standard.
If you are reading this because you searched for Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu review, Amrit Hospital Moga review, Amrit Hospital Moga patient experience, or Moga laparoscopic surgery review, this is the first thing I want you to know: do not sign any hospital form until every important field is filled and you understand what you are signing.
The main issue: I was asked to sign a blank form
The most serious part of my Amrit Hospital Moga experience was not waiting. It was not only the bill. It was not even only the pharmacy issue. The main issue was this: during file processing, staff handed me a form and asked me to sign it while they had left it blank.
I looked at the paper and saw important fields empty. The form had fields like my name, the patient’s name, the doctor’s name, the procedure details, ward-related charges, treatment charges, and other terms mentioned on the form with no information written in them. The signature area was at the bottom, and I was supposed to sign there before those details were filled. I refused because a signature on a blank medical or billing document is not a small thing. It can become anything after the signature is already there.
I said: “It is empty. I cannot sign an empty form.”
The response I got from the reception side was not, “Let us fill it first.” The response was pressure to sign first.
“Sign kroge tabhi to fill hoga na.”
In English: “Only if you sign will it be filled, right?”
That sentence is the reason this review exists. From a patient’s family side, that is a major red flag. A hospital should fill the form first and ask for a signature after. It should not ask for the signature first and write the details later. Whether the patient is paying cash or online, the basic rule should not change: a blank form should not be signed.
The reception conversation became the turning point
After I refused, I was told to sit for a few minutes. I waited and went back. Another staff member handed the file to me more aggressively and again told me to sign. I again said the same thing: the form is not filled, so I cannot sign it.
There were several people at reception. One person was trying to push me to sign. Another staff member also acted like I was creating an unnecessary issue. I did not refuse treatment. I did not refuse formalities. I asked for the most basic thing: fill the form first, then ask for a signature.
One line they said was: “We are not taking over your land.”
To me, that missed the entire point. A signature matters whether it is a land paper, a hospital form, a consent form, or a billing paper. If a document carries my signature, I should know what it says before signing. That is not drama. That is common sense.
Another line that stayed with me was about writing my name from the signature. I tried to explain that a signature is not always a full readable name. It can be a sign. If the hospital needed my name, they could simply ask me. I was right there. But the staff kept treating the blank signature as normal.
The doctor conversation: what Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu said when I raised it
Until this point, I thought the staff was doing this on their own. I still hoped the doctor would understand once I explained it. That changed when Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu came for the round in the ward around 2:30 pm on 16 July 2026.
The doctor asked my mother how she was. She replied that she was okay. Then the doctor turned toward me and asked whether we wanted to proceed with the operation. I said yes, but there was an issue. I explained that the reception staff wanted me to sign a form before they filled it.
The doctor said: “Do not create inconvenience on small things.”
That reply shocked me more than the reception conversation. For me, a blank form is not a small thing. I told him the form had empty fields and asked how I could sign before anyone wrote those details. I said I trusted him for his experience, but this kind of process did not keep me comfortable or faithful in the treatment.
What I needed at that moment was simple. I needed the doctor to say, “Fill the form first, then take the signature.” That would have solved the issue in seconds. Instead, he expected me to accept the system as it worked there.
The message was clear: sign it, or leave.
So I chose to leave. I did not want my mother to go into surgery in a hospital where I was already uncomfortable with the paperwork and where my concern about a blank form was treated like a small inconvenience.
Why this blank-form issue matters more than everything else
People may think a form is just a form. I do not agree. A blank form with a signature can create confusion later. It can be used to write details after the patient family has already signed. I am not saying I audited what would have been written because I refused to sign it. My point is stronger and simpler: no patient family should be pushed to sign first and read later.
In a hospital, families are already under pressure. The patient is in pain. Surgery is being discussed. Staff are moving files. Doctors are busy. In that moment, many families sign whatever is placed in front of them because they do not want to delay treatment. That is exactly why hospitals must be extra transparent, not less transparent.
For me, the blank form was not a paperwork mistake. It was the point where trust broke. The doctor conversation after that made the trust break completely.
Quick timeline of my Amrit Hospital Moga experience
| Date and time | What happened |
| 15 July 2026, afternoon | Tests were done and around Rs 1,600 was paid online. I asked for a bill and the response was not proper. |
| 15 July 2026, around 7 pm | My mother was admitted at Amrit Hospital Moga for a planned laparoscopic operation. |
| Night of 15 July | There was not much activity because it was evening and most file work was expected the next day. |
| 16 July 2026, file processing | I was handed a blank form and asked to sign before it was filled. |
| 16 July 2026, reception conversation | I refused to sign an empty form and staff kept insisting that signing first was normal. |
| 16 July 2026, around 2:30 pm | I raised the blank-form issue with Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu during the ward round. |
| After the doctor conversation | I decided not to proceed and walked my mother out before the operation. |
Other red flag: the test bill conversation
The blank form was the main reason I left, but it was not the first thing that made me uncomfortable. Earlier, before admission and file processing, I got tests done and paid around Rs 1,600 through online payment. When I asked for a bill, I did not get a proper bill immediately. The reply was this:
“Bill ki kya zaroorat hai jab online se paid hai?”
In English: “What is the need for a bill when it has been paid online?”
That made no sense to me. Online payment does not remove the need for a bill. If anything, a payment record should make proper billing easier. I asked multiple times and was told to speak to the doctor for the bill. A patient family should not have to chase a doctor just to get a bill for tests.
Other red flag: the pharmacy bill did not feel right to me
After admission, I got medicines from the hospital pharmacy and asked for the bill. The pharmacy did not give me the bill properly at first. I went back to the pharmacy, which was hardly a few steps away, and said clearly: give me the bill or give me the refund.
The medicines did not add up properly to the combined MRP. After I insisted, I got a bill, but it included things I had not even purchased. At that time, I still tried not to create a scene. I tried to ignore it and focus on my mother’s treatment. But after the blank-form pressure, all these earlier signs started looking connected in my mind.
Why the form issue matters for every patient
Whether a patient pays in cash or online, the same concern remains. The hospital should complete a form before taking a signature. It should give bills properly. Staff should not make a patient family feel wrong for asking basic questions.
Why I walked out before my mother’s surgery
I walked out because surgery requires trust. A patient puts their body, pain, risk, money, and documents in the hands of a hospital and doctor. When trust breaks before the operation, continuing becomes difficult.
For me, trust broke in three stages: first when billing did not feel transparent, second when the pharmacy bill did not feel right, and finally when I was asked to sign a blank form and the doctor did not treat that concern seriously. That final point made me stop everything.
I called the doctor who had referred us and explained what happened. After that, we left Amrit Hospital Moga. My mother did not undergo the planned operation there.
My direct warning to patients searching Amrit Hospital Moga reviews
If you are considering Amrit Hospital Moga or Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu, do your own checking. I am not asking you to make a medical decision only from my review. I am saying this personal experience is serious enough that you should go prepared, ask direct questions, and refuse anything that feels wrong.
- Do not sign any blank hospital form.
- Do not sign a form if the procedure name, patient details, doctor details, consent details, or billing-related details are empty.
- Ask for bills for tests, medicines, and every payment.
- Take photos or copies of documents before signing where legally allowed.
- Ask the doctor directly if staff ask you to sign something incomplete.
- If the answer still does not satisfy you, take a second opinion before surgery.
If you face billing or service issues, official complaint options include the National Consumer Helpline. For medical-practice related complaints in Punjab, patients can also check the Punjab Medical Council complaint page.
What I want from this review
I want patients and families to become alert. I want people searching for Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu reviews or Amrit Hospital Moga reviews to see a real patient-family experience, not only polished listings or general information. I also want hospitals to understand that families are not creating problems when they ask for filled forms and bills. They are protecting themselves.
This is my personal review and my personal experience, checked and published by Zillion Media. The strongest point is simple: staff asked me to sign a blank form before my mother’s planned surgery, I refused, I raised it with the doctor, and I left because I did not feel safe continuing there.
FAQ about this Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu review of Amrit Hospital Moga
Is this a Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu review of Amrit Hospital Moga?
Yes. This is a Dr Harjinder Singh Sidhu review of Amrit Hospital Moga based on my experience before my mother’s planned laparoscopic operation. The main issue was the blank-form signing pressure and the doctor’s response when I raised it.
What is the main complaint in this Amrit Hospital Moga review?
The main complaint is that staff asked me to sign a form before they filled it. I refused because important details were empty. No hospital should ask any patient or family member to sign a blank medical or billing-related form.
Does the payment method change the blank-form concern?
No. The concern is the blank form itself. Whether a patient pays in cash or through online payment, signing an incomplete form is unsafe.
Did the surgery happen at Amrit Hospital Moga?
No. We left before the operation because I did not feel comfortable continuing after the blank-form issue and the doctor conversation.
Why should people searching Amrit Hospital Moga reviews read this?
Because this is a first-hand patient-family experience with specific details, date, timeline, remembered conversations, billing concerns, and the exact reason we walked out before surgery.
What should a patient ask before surgery at any hospital?
Ask for the procedure name, doctor name, patient details, consent details, estimated charges, medicine bills, test bills, and copies of documents. Do not sign anything blank or incomplete.
