May 27. There is no red date in the calendar, but for thousands of people in white coats, it is a special day. In Russia and some countries of the former USSR, doctors are unofficially celebrated on this day. Not the Day of the Doctor (which is the third Sunday of June), but a special, almost family celebration — a day of gratitude to those who heal our souls and bodies. How it appeared, how it is celebrated, and why it is important — we tell you.
There is no exact history. According to one version, on May 27, 1867, the first free ambulatory clinics for the poor opened in Russia. According to another, on this day in 1905, local doctors held a congress where they adopted an ethical code. The third version is folk: after World War II, field surgeons were celebrated on May 27, who saved millions of lives.
In the USSR, doctors were officially celebrated only on the Day of the Doctor (the third Sunday of June). But on May 27, many hospitals quietly, in their own way, celebrated their "own" day. The tradition has been preserved since the collapse of the Union. Today, in some regions of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, they hold actions in support of doctors, hand out awards, say "thank you."
In 2026, this date acquires a special meaning. After the COVID-19 pandemic and the stresses of the last few years, society has more sharply realized: a doctor is not just a profession, it is a calling, often deadly dangerous.
The formats are different. In hospitals: solemn meetings, awarding certificates and monetary prizes to the best employees, tea parties. In cities: administrations organize concerts in parks, give flowers and souvenirs. In schools: children are asked to draw a picture or write an essay "My Favorite Doctor." In social networks: flashmobs with hashtags #thankyoudoctor, #may27, #dayofthedoctor.
In polyclinics, patients give doctors flowers, chocolates, cards. Some bring cakes and pies. Ambulance doctors receive treats from grateful citizens — sometimes even at 3 am.
In 2026, "charitable breakfasts" are especially popular: patients pool money for a delicious meal for the department. Or they transfer money to a fund for supporting medics instead of giving personal gifts.
Doctors work themselves to the bone. Shifts of 24-36 hours, lack of sleep, constant stress, responsibility for life. Society is accustomed to demanding, but rarely thanking. Celebration is a psychological relief. When a doctor hears "thank you," sees flowers from patients, he understands: his work is not in vain. This reduces the risk of burnout.
Second: drawing attention to health care problems. During the celebration, topics such as low salaries, overloading, and a shortage of medicines are raised. It is uncomfortable for authorities to ignore these issues on a holiday. Third: vocational guidance. When children see that doctors are celebrated, they also want to become doctors.
Fourth: increasing trust. In the era of anti-vaxxers and "doctors are poisoning us," any day of gratitude strengthens the bond between medicine and society.
The simplest way is to say "thank you." But you can also be creative. Give flowers (but not fanatically, not 101 roses). A card made by your child is worth more than a purchased one. A sweet gift is a good idea, but keep in mind that doctors are on diets. It is better to give fruits, nuts, halva.
If you want to celebrate a specific doctor, write a detailed review on the clinic's website or in social networks. Doctors love this — their bosses see it. You can record a video of gratitude. Or transfer money to a charitable fund for supporting medics with a note "In honor of Dr. Ivanov."
Do not give: alcohol, money in envelopes (awkward), souvenirs with the inscription "Best Doctor" (he has a hundred of them), medical instruments (a hint that it doesn't work well). Do not invite to a restaurant — after a shift, doctors want to sleep, not eat.
In the USA, it's National Doctors' Day on March 30. In India — July 1 (the birthday of the famous doctor Bidhan Chandra Roy). In Brazil — October 18 (the day of the Catholic Saint Luke, the patron saint of doctors). In China — August 19. May 27 is a post-Soviet phenomenon.
In Estonia and Latvia, May 27 is also remembered, but celebrated modestly. In Georgia, it is celebrated on a large scale with wine and songs. In Armenia, with a church service for the health of doctors.
In Israel, doctors are not celebrated on May 27, but there is a "Day of Gratitude to Doctors" in November. In Europe, doctors are celebrated on the day of Saint Luke (October 18).
The Russian tradition of May 27 is our local, warm celebration. Without official holidays, without fireworks. Sincere.
The COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2023) left scars. Doctors worked in red zones without sleep, without vacations. Thousands of medics died. After the pandemic, many left the profession — they were burned out. The remaining ones work with double the load. In 2026, we are still reaping the fruits: a shortage of staff, queues in clinics, fatigue.
Therefore, the celebration of May 27, 2026, is not a formality. It is support for the survivors. It is "we remember those who died." It is "we value those who remained."
In many cities, candles are lit on this day in memory of doctors who died from COVID-19. Flowers are laid at memorials. Minutes of silence are held.
Surgeon Mikhail, 57. Saved a 10-year-old boy with a stab wound to the heart. The operation lasted 7 hours. The boy is alive. His parents come to his office every year on May 27.
Pediatrician Irina, 43. Worked in the red zone, got COVID-19 herself, then returned. Her patients (children) send drawings "My Aunt Doctor" after recovery. Irina keeps them in a folder.
Ambulance: paramedic Sergey, 29. Pulled a grandmother out of a burning apartment, then resuscitated her (heart attack). The grandmother is alive. Every May 27, she calls and says: "Son, thank you."
There are thousands of such stories. On May 27, they pop up in social networks, in the media. This reminds us: a doctor is not just an automatic dispenser for prescriptions. It is a person who risks his life.
Flagships are paid clinics. There, they hand out awards up to 100,000 rubles, take the team to a sanatorium, give vacation tickets. In state hospitals, it is more modest: a certificate, a box of chocolates, a 2000 ruble bonus. But this is pleasant too.
In some hospitals, they hold "open days": patients can write thank you notes on a special stand. In the evening, the chief doctor reads the most touching ones.
Psychiatric hospitals conduct art therapy for doctors — to relieve stress. They draw, sculpt, dance.
In rural FAPs, they celebrate the whole village. The nurse and the doctor are greeted by patients from neighboring villages. They bring eggs, lard, jam. This is touching.
Not all doctors are happy with May 27. Some say, "Again these flowers, better raise salaries." Yes, doctors' salaries in Russia remain low (average — 50-80 thousand, but this includes overtime). The day of gratitude does not replace decent pay.
Other doctors believe that doctors should be celebrated not on a separate day, but constantly. Once a year is hypocrisy. Some are tired of gifts. Others are embarrassed by attention.
However, most doctors are still happy. Because the word "thank you" rarely sounds in their address on weekdays. And on the holiday — it does.
It is important that celebration does not become formal. That behind the gifts there is sincerity.
Don't wait for May 27. You can say "thank you" to a doctor on May 28, and December 30. Just for coming to the call, prescribing medication, not being rude. You can send an SMS, write a review on the "My Doctor" portal. You can transfer money to the "Give Life" fund (for doctors treating children with oncology). You can offer your help as a volunteer in a clinic (hand out tickets, sit at the reception desk).
The main thing is not to demand the supernatural from a doctor. Don't shout "you are obligated." Don't write complaints about the queue. Respect the work. This is the best gratitude.
May 27 is a reminder. And then — every day.
Celebrating doctors on May 27 is not for show. It is for living people. So that a doctor, exhausted after a night shift, knows: he is loved, valued, awaited. So that a smile appears on his face. So that he does not quit but continues to treat us, our parents, our children.
So take a bouquet (inexpensive). Or bake cookies. Or just go to your family doctor and say: "Thank you, doctor. For everything." Maybe it will save someone's life. Maybe yours.
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