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'PG medical course admission process flawed'
By Our Special Correspondent
BANGALORE, AUG. 23. The Minister of State for Medical Education,
Dr. G. Parameshwar, has said that the process of admission to
postgraduate courses in Medicine will be changed from next year
after a study of the defects in the present system.
Dr. Parameshwar, who was recently vested with the Medical
Education portfolio, is also in charge of Higher Education. He
told presspersons here today that there were complaints about the
courses being set apart for merit students by the private medical
colleges. One specific complaint was that the subjects for which
there was a poor demand were being allotted under the government
quota and the others were included in the management quota. The
admission matrix for the various postgraduate courses for the
current academic year was ready and would be issued in two days.
Under the Medical Council of India (MCI) rules, governed by the
directions of the Supreme Court, 80 per cent of postgraduate
seats in private colleges came under the management quota and 20
per cent came under the government quota. However, with several
private medical colleges having only one or two seats for several
of the in-demand postgraduate subjects, the government quota
suffered. In cases where there were five seats, the government
quota was just one seat.
Dr. Parameshwar said admissions were presently going on for the
MBBS course. The MCI, which had earlier barred admissions to two
private medical colleges, had now lifted the ban on the Yenepoya
Medical College, Mangalore after the college fulfilled some of
the conditions. The ban on admissions to the Khade Bande Nawaz
Medical College, Gulbarga, however, continued.
Dr. Parameshwar said that with medical education being governed
by specific rules and monitored by various agencies, including
the Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences and the MCI, the
State Government would now focus its attention on improving the
conditions in the government-run teaching hospitals. The
functioning of professors and the purchase of medical equipment
and drugs would be closely monitored, apart from the upkeep of
government hospitals. Several of the hospitals were in need of
urgent attention.
The minister, who held a meeting with the heads of all the
government teaching hospitals two days ago, said monitoring the
functioning of the hospitals was an important part of his
assignment and he would devote more time to this aspect. ``I will
spend at least half a day in each hospital and go into all
aspects. There is no point in making a hurried visit. There are
complaints galore, and I would like to attend to at least a major
share of them. This has been brought to the notice of the
superintendents of all the hospitals.''
Ragging: Referring to a complaint of ragging reported at the
private M.S. Ramaiah Medical College here, he said ragging was a
cognisable offence and would be looked into seriously. If it was
established that the management of the college was trying to
cover up the incident, then it would be pulled up by the
Government. Each college was expected, under the rules, to
constitute an anti-ragging squad which included the local police
officer.
Asked about the junior doctors frequently going on strike, Dr.
Parameshwar said the Government would find a lasting solution to
the problem. Generally, the strike by the junior doctors centred
around the payment of stipend, and the Government would study the
situation in the other States and arrive at a uniform policy on
stipend. ``We will arrive at a clear-cut policy and tell the
junior doctors about the Government's stand.''
On the Kannada Development Authority recommending that Kannada
should be included as a language of study in medical education,
he said medical education was controlled by various agencies and
they should all accept the recommendation if Kannada was to be
introduced. Study of languages in professional courses was
discontinued a long time ago. ``We will look into this matter,''
he said. There was also a demand from the protagonists of Kannada
that it should be the medium of instruction in the professional
courses to at least meet the demands of the rural students.
The Karnataka Universities Bill, which was recently approved by
the two Houses of the Legislature, would now be sent to the
Governor for her assent. Guidelines under the Act would be framed
after the Governor gave her assent, he added.
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