Doctor Chat Gyi Thazin -myanmar Video (DIRECT - Secrets)
Regardless of whether the video is real or a smear campaign, this incident highlights a dangerous trend in Myanmar: The rise of the "Influencer Physician."
We urge our readers to adhere to the following safety rules:
In one viral segment, Dr. Thazin attempts to teach listeners how to describe chest pain over the phone. She coins the term "Digital Stethoscope," asking viewers to place their phone microphone near their chest while breathing deeply. While medically unorthodox, this interactive moment captured the audience's imagination, spawning memes and reaction videos across Facebook. Doctor Chat Gyi Thazin -myanmar Video
As of the last 72 hours, there has been no official statement from Doctor Chat Gyi Thazin herself regarding the authenticity of the video. Her Facebook page, which previously boasted 500,000+ followers, has either been set to private or is deleting negative comments at a rapid pace.
However, the damage is done. Several Myanmar e-commerce platforms that previously hosted her sponsored posts have quietly removed her product listings. Regardless of whether the video is real or
Important Note for Viewers: Many scam accounts are now using the keyword "Doctor Chat Gyi Thazin - Myanmar Video" to distribute malware or phishing links. Users searching for the clip are being redirected to fake download sites. Always ensure you are on reputable streaming platforms or news outlets like The Irrawaddy or Myanmar Now to verify content.
Myanmar audiences are generally respectful of titles. When someone calls themselves "Doctor," the public assumes they have a legitimate medical degree (MBBS) from a recognized university like University of Medicine 1, Yangon. However, sleuths have pointed out that Doctor Chat Gyi Thazin may hold a degree in Traditional Burmese Medicine (TTM) or a diploma in nursing, not a full medical license to prescribe allopathic drugs. The video triggered a reckoning regarding her credentials. However, the damage is done
Since recent political changes and the COVID-19 pandemic, trust in government-run hospitals has fluctuated. Private healthcare remains expensive. Dr. Thazin presents herself as a "neutral" expert—neither government propagandist nor greedy private practitioner.