Chulbuli creates a "special treatment plan" for Sameer that involves zero injections but plenty of "social therapy." She makes him help other patients, read stories to the kids in the pediatric ward, and even participate in the clinic’s annual talent show rehearsals.

The stern Dr. Khanna finally snaps when he finds Chulbuli and Sameer organizing a makeshift dance-off in the hallway to cheer up a depressed patient. He threatens to fire her. However, the patients rally behind her, proving that the clinic’s recovery rates have soared since Chulbuli started her "joy-first" protocol.

Dr. Khanna softens, realizing the clinic needs a heart as much as a stethoscope. Sameer’s "injury" miraculously heals, but he finds reasons to keep visiting the clinic—bringing Chulbuli’s favorite samosas every afternoon.

In the heart of a sleepy Bhopal neighborhood, is not your average nurse. While the doctors are serious and the patients are grumpy, Chulbuli arrives every morning on her yellow scooter, humming Bollywood hits. She believes that "laughter is the best medicine," though her head doctor, the no-nonsense Dr. Khanna , thinks "medicine is the best medicine." The Conflict