Monday, May 30, 2022

Practical difficulties: Forced home from China by Covid, medical grads in a limbo

Practical difficulties: Forced home from China by Covid, medical grads in a limbo

Shradha.Chettri@timesgroup.com

New Delhi : Surya G from Tamil Nadu finished his studies at North Sichuan Medical University in China in 2020. As Covid19 spread, other students and he were brought back. His studies continued online, but without practicals and internship. He has not been able to return due to the Chinese government’s “Zero Covid policy”.

 Though he cleared the Foreign Medical Graduate Examination (FMGE), he has been sitting idle at home. Like him, close to 23,000 students who had joined Chinese medical colleges in 2016, 2017 and 2018 are a worried lot. Demanding that the Indian government make arrangements for such students to conduct their practical/internships, they staged a protest at Jantar Mantar on Sunday. Earlier, too, such students from across the country made several  representations. As their problems were not addressed, they held a protest and hunger strike. “The only thing we are asking for is to make arrangements for our practicals. How can we become doctors without performing practicals or doing internships?” asked Surya. In China, medical studies are of almost six years — five years of study and one year of internship. A large number of students go there as medical studies are cheap. Shashank Srivastava, a 2018 joining batch at Nanjing Medical University, has already missed 2. 5 years of practicals.

“We have not attended even one surgery or pathology class and missed almost 2. 5 years of practicals. Our clinical starts in the third year and we have already missed it,” said the Delhi-based student. The fees at his university is Rs 3. 4 lakh per annum. “Several students also get scholarships upon performing well,” he added. Wearing white coats and carrying stethoscopes, the students protested in the sweltering heat. There were a large number of students from the Northeast and Kerala too. Holding banners of “China FMG students wants justice”, the protest was organised by All India Association of Foreign Medical Students and Parents.

Barani, a fourth-year student of Dali Medical University, said, “In our course, one-third of the studying is practical, which means if everything was normal, we would have been spending 3-4 days in labs. National Medical Commission had allowed online classes due to the pandemic, but they said practical and clinical training was essential once the colleges or universities reopened. Our university cannot do anything because of the Chinese government’s policies.

PRACTICAL DIFFICULTIES


 

DOCTORS


 

AADHAAR


 

RULES FOR RENTING OUT SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT


 

VACCINE


 

Govt withdraws UIDAI’s Aadhaar caution note after flutter


Govt withdraws UIDAI’s Aadhaar caution note after flutter

Pankaj.Doval@timesgroup.com

New Delhi : Aadhaar caught the Centre on the wrong foot over safety concerns after a statement issued by the Bengaluru unit of the Unique Identification Authority of India — the agency that issues the 12-digit unique identity number — created a flutter when it asked people not to share their info with “unlicensed private entities” such as hotels or movie halls as it can be “misused”. As the advisory started creating chatter on social media, the ministry of information technology — the nodal ministry for UIDAI — had to beat a hasty retreat, reassuring there are enough safeguards and protection within the Aadhaar system, and asking people to continue to share the unique ID number, but after exercising “normal prudence”.

“In view of the possibility of the misinterpretation of the press release, the same stands withdrawn with immediate effect,” the IT ministry said, uncharacteristically issuing the clarification on Sunday. Over the last few years, Aadhaar has become the most trusted identity proof with hospitals, hotels and employers insisting on its photocopies, though it is “voluntary”. Most individuals have been sharing photocopies, with some noticing they have been misused in documents. In case of several agencies, devices for biometric authentication were never deployed with UIDAI pushing the use of QR codes embedded in Aadhaar cards. › Safety fears, P 9 The use of Aadhaar photocopies has created safety fears Two days ago, UIDAI Bengaluru office issued a press release under the heading ‘Caution’, asking people to be careful when giving out Aadhaar for certain verification processes. “Do not share (a) photocopy of your Aadhaar with any organization because it can be misused.

Alternatively, please use a masked Aadhaar which displays only the last 4 digits of your Aadhaar number. It can be downloaded from UIDAI’s official website," it said, further adding, "Only those organisations that have obtained a User License from the UIDAI can use Aadhaar for establishing the identity of a person. Unlicensed private entities like hotels or film halls are not permitted to collect or keep copies of Aadhaar card. It is an offence under the Aadhaar Act 2016. If a private entity demands to see your Aadhaar card, or seeks a photocopy of your Aadhaar card, please verify that they have (a) valid User License from the UIDAI."

While Aadhaar has proved to be safe, the use of photocopies has created safety fears. The UIDAI move to first alert citizens about not sharing Aadhar photocopies and then subsequently retract its statement, has kicked off a row with data security experts, former bureaucrats, activists and political leaders 5/30/22, 7:13 AM about:blank about:blank 2/2 hitting out at UIDAI. “In the initial release, the UIDAI admitted to long pending concerns with Aadhaar, which were debated and proven in the court. UIDAI always insisted they have improved Aadhaar’s security by bringing in virtual ID, masked Aadhaar numbers, but has never promoted them enough,” Kodali Srinivas, a data security expert, said.

“This release accepting privacy and security concerns with Aadhaar has been withdrawn again, because the Government doesn’t want people to distrust and stop using Aadhaar.” French security researcher Baptiste Robert, who exposed several Aadhaar leaks in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, said that four years ago he had warned about the issues with the Aadhaar.

Annamalai University staff begin indefinite sit-in over pending dues

Annamalai University staff begin indefinite sit-in over pending dues The members also sought settlement of retirement benefits, including co...