We've all been there: sitting in the DMV for three hours, questioning every life choice that brought you to this moment, wondering if your license photo will be outdated before you even leave the building. It's not exactly where you want to find yourself when time actually matters. But that's precisely the comparison Elon Musk made when commenting on a heartbreaking story from Canada, where a man died after more than eight hours in an emergency room waiting area.
The case involves 44-year-old Prashant Sreekumar, who was taken to Grey Nuns Community Hospital in Edmonton, Alberta, after experiencing severe chest pain at work. According to Global News, his father said Sreekumar described the pain as "15 out of 10" in severity. Hospital staff reportedly gave him Tylenol and said an ECG showed "nothing of significance."
More than eight hours passed in triage. When he was finally called in, Sreekumar collapsed minutes later and died of apparent cardiac arrest.
His wife shared an emotional account that went viral, describing how she raised concerns throughout the day about his climbing blood pressure, which eventually hit 210. She said staff told them chest pain wasn't considered an "acute problem" and instructed him to sit down. According to her statement, he stood up briefly, then collapsed. When she tried to advocate for him during the wait, she was told, "Ma'am, you are being very rude."
That video spread fast, triggering public anger over emergency room delays and patient care under Canada's strained provincial healthcare systems. The hospital, part of Alberta's publicly funded system, confirmed the case is under review but hasn't released further details.
Musk chimed in on X, responding to a post about the incident with a sharp critique: "When the government does medical care, it is about as good as the DMV." The day before, on Christmas, he'd already taken a similar shot, writing, "Government healthcare is like having the DMV as your doctor."
But he didn't stop at criticism. Musk added a pitch for his own ventures: "Grok and Optimus will provide incredible healthcare for all." Grok is the AI chatbot developed by his company xAI, while Optimus is the humanoid robot project at Tesla Inc. (TSLA). Both are still in development, but Musk is already framing them as the future of medicine.
This isn't new territory for him. Back in November, Musk predicted that AI would eventually deliver "superhuman" medical care, suggesting that AI and robotics could make people "far wealthier than the richest person on Earth." It's classic Musk: part futurist vision, part product placement, all wrapped in a hot take about systems he thinks are broken.
Whether you agree with his DMV analogy or not, the underlying story is grim. Emergency departments across Canada have faced mounting pressure in recent years, with long wait times becoming a flashpoint in debates over public healthcare funding and staffing shortages. Cases like Sreekumar's put a human face on what can feel like abstract policy arguments.
Critics of Musk's comments say the future can't arrive soon enough, but that people shouldn't have to wait for robots and chatbots to get timely, compassionate care. And no one should die in a waiting room that feels more like a bureaucratic holding pen than a place built to save lives.




