Monday, March 3, 2025

Private medical colleges save crores on stipends as NMC dithers


Private medical colleges save crores on stipends as NMC dithers

Private medical colleges are saving significant amounts by underpaying or not paying stipends to MBBS interns and resident doctors, despite regulations. The National Medical Commission (NMC) has been ineffective in enforcing standards, leading to disparities and financial exploitation in private institutions.

Rema NagarajanTNN

Mar 2, 2025, 18:17 IST

Private medical colleges are saving crores of rupees by either not paying stipends to MBBS interns and resident doctors or paying them a fraction of what government medical colleges pay. According to the National Medical Commission (NMC), the data on stipend payment submitted by colleges showed that 60 (33 govt colleges and 27 private ones) were not paying MBBS interns any stipend.

Most private colleges have not even submitted the information on how much stipend is being paid. After initially threatening to take action, in the face of colleges not even submitting data sought from them, the apex regulator, the NMC, has passed the buck to state authorities.

Thousands of MBBS students doing clinical duties during the final year internship are being paid less than the national floor minimum wage of Rs 5,300 per month according to the data submitted to Supreme Court by NMC. Data from 20 private colleges shows that they pay Rs 5,000 or less. Many colleges have admitted that they do not pay any stipend. Though this information was available to NMC in July last year, no action has been taken against any college.

The NMC’s PG Medical Education Regulation 2023 stipulate that private colleges have to pay a stipend equivalent to what government colleges of the state pay resident doctors. However, the NMC (Compulsory Rotating Medical Internship) Regulations, 2021 are vague about how much MBBS interns should be paid. They state that "all interns shall be paid stipend as fixed by the appropriate authority applicable to the institution/University or State". Taking advantage of this, many private colleges pay MBBS interns a pittance.

“I had alerted the health ministry to the vague wording in the clause regarding stipend for MBBS interns in 2022, when the draft was put up for comments from the public, and later raised objections when the suggestion was not incorporated. I had requested them to amend the clause to make it mandatory for all colleges to pay stipend at par with government medical colleges of the particular state. Neither the health ministry nor the NMC has done anything about it,” said Dr KV Babu, an RTI activist who has been pursuing the issue over five years.

The stipend paid by some private colleges is as low as Rs 2,000 per month though they take several lakhs as fees per year. For instance, in Andhra Pradesh, government colleges pay MBBS interns Rs 22,500 per month. However, many private colleges are paying just Rs 2,000-5,000 as stipend per month. The tuition fee alone for the MBBS course in these private colleges is Rs 65 lakh for management quota students and over Rs 1.2 crore for NRI quota students. Most of these colleges with about 150 seats each would have had to spend roughly Rs 4 crore per year if they paid stipend equal to what government colleges are paying. By paying the interns a pittance, a college could save over Rs 2 crore or more each year, even as they collect around Rs 50 crore just from tuition fees.

Similarly, in Karnataka, MBBS interns in state government colleges are paid a stipend of Rs 30,000 per month. But many private colleges are paying just Rs 10,000-12,000, while their annual tuition fees for management and NRI seats could be as much as Rs 25 lakh to Rs 45 lakh per year. In Pondicherry, while government colleges pay Rs 20,000 as stipend, a deemed university medical college with 250 seats, where annual tuition fees are Rs 25 lakh, pays just Rs 5,000. The college earns over 1.2 crore from each MBBS student, but spends less than one lakh rupees on stipend for each student.

There is wide variation even in the stipend paid in government colleges from about Rs 35,000 in Assam to just Rs 12,000 in Uttar Pradesh. This is despite a long-standing demand of MBBS students for the amount to be centrally fixed and made mandatory for all colleges whether government or private. NMC was not even acting on the issue of non-payment of stipend till the Supreme Court categorically stated that paying stipend was mandatory. The case drags on as NMC claims to be struggling to get data from medical colleges. Instead of asking colleges, which are under its direct control, the NMC has been writing innumerable letters to the directorate of medical education of various states asking them to submit the data from all colleges on payment of stipend.


Stipend paid to MBBS interns (in Rs)

State

Govt

Pvt

Assam

35,000

NA

West Bengal

29,700-32,000

12,500-28,000

Karnataka

30,000

10,000-25,000

Odisha

28,000

15,000

Tamil Nadu

25,000-27,300

2,750-13,500

Delhi

26,300

no info

Meghalaya

26,300

NA

Kerala

26,000

10,000-16,000

Telangana

25,900

2,000-10,000

Arunachal

25,000

NA

Andhra Pradesh

22,500

2,000-10,000

Tripura

20,500

no info

Bihar

20,000

10,000

Goa

20,000

NA

Himachal Pradesh

20,000

no info

Pondicherry

20,000

2,500-5,000

Gujarat

18,200

12,000

Maharashtra

18,000

4,000-12,000

Uttarakhand

17,000

5,000

Punjab

15,000

15,000

J&K

12,300

no info

Haryana*

12,000

no info

Mizoram

12,000

NA

Uttar Pradesh

12,000

4,000-7,500

Sikkim

NA

14,500

NA- not applicable since the state may not have a private college, or a govt college in the case of Sikkim

No info- the information has not been submitted by the state/college

*only one college has given data and the amount is wrong since Haryana revised the stipend to Rs 17,000 in 2018 and last year it was revised again to Rs 24,310.

States which had not submitted any information included Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Manipur, Nagaland, and the union territories of Chandigarh and Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The stipend in govt colleges in Rajasthan is Rs 14,000, in Jharkhand it is Rs 17,000, Rs 15,900 in Chhattisgarh and almost Rs 14,000 in Madhya Pradesh.

Source: Affidavit filed by the NMC in court in July 2024

Madurai AIIMS begins hiring

Madurai AIIMS begins hiring

TNN | Mar 3, 2025, 03.53 AM IST



Madurai: As the construction of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Madurai progresses in Thoppur, with the first phase set for completion by early 2026, the institution has begun recruiting for 39 faculty positions across various departments. The last date for applications is April 4.

An official notification said, applications are invited for four professor posts, four additional professor posts, five associate professor posts, and 26 assistant professor posts.

Selected candidates will initially be posted at Government Medical College, Ramanathapuram, the temporary AIIMS Madurai campus, and later transferred based on the progress of the Thoppur campus. More details are available on the official AIIMS Madurai website. TNN

Mofussil buses to terminate at Kilambakkam from tomorrow


Mofussil buses to terminate at Kilambakkam from tomorrow


Mar 3, 2025, 03.55 AM IST

Chennai: Starting Tuesday, all govt mofussil buses from the southern districts will terminate at Kalaignar Centenary Bus Terminus (KCBT) in Kilambakkam instead of Tambaram, following a directive aimed at easing congestion on Grand Southern Trunk Road.

While the govt has promised to deploy 100 additional MTC buses to improve connectivity between KCBT and key transit hubs in Chennai, passengers remain unconvinced, citing the inconsistency of MTC services. At present, the govt claims to operate 590 buses from KCBT.

“We often wait 15 to 20 minutes for a bus in the early hours when returning to Chennai after holidays, only to find overcrowded MTC buses. Those who can’t afford to wait are forced to pay higher fares for autos or taxis to reach Tambaram,” said B Ganesh, a resident-activist from Varadharajapuram. He also criticized the decision to reroute buses to Kilambakkam before completing the Kilambakkam railway station and pedestrian pathway connecting it to the terminus. The govt earlier promised to open the railway station by May.

The decision to divert mofussil buses to Kilambakkam is based on recommendations from Tambaram police to decongest GST Road.

At present, TNSTC buses halt in front of Tambaram railway station, blocking one or two lanes of the three-lane road, causing daily bottlenecks. The problem is worsened by autos encroaching on the left-most lanes. On the opposite side, govt buses are often forced to stop in the middle of the road to drop passengers, despite a designated bus bay.

By shifting mofussil bus operations to Kilambakkam, police expect smoother movement of MTC buses and local vehicles through the area, where traffic delays of 10 to 15 minutes have become routine.

Sunday, March 2, 2025

பாஸ்போர்ட் பெறுவதற்கு பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் கட்டாயம்

பாஸ்போர்ட் பெறுவதற்கு பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் கட்டாயம்


ADDED : மார் 02, 2025 05:32 AM



புதுடில்லி: கடந்த, 2023 அக்., 1ம் தேதிக்கு பின் பிறந்தவர்கள், புதிதாக பாஸ்போர்ட் பெறுவதற்கு பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் கட்டாயம் என வெளியுறவு அமைச்சகம் அறிவித்துள்ளது.

'பாஸ்போர்ட் சட்டம் 1980' விதிகளில் மத்திய வெளியுறவு அமைச்சகம் திருத்தம் செய்துள்ளது.

இது தொடர்பாக, வெளியிட்ட அறிக்கையில், 'கடந்த, 2023ம் ஆண்டு அக்டோபர் 1ம் தேதிக்கு பிறகு பிறந்தவர்கள், புதிதாக பாஸ்போர்ட் பெறுவதற்கு பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் கட்டாயம்.

மாநகராட்சி, நகராட்சி போன்றவை அல்லது அதற்கு நிகரான அமைப்புகள் வழங்கும் பிறப்பு, இறப்பு சான்றிதழ்கள் மட்டுமே பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் ஆவணமாக ஏற்கப்படும்.

அரசிதழில் அறிவிப்பு வெளியான நாளில் இருந்து இந்த உத்தரவு அமலுக்கு வருகிறது' என, தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

எனினும், 2023, அக்.1 -க்கு முன்பு பிறந்தவர்களுக்கு இத்தகைய பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் தேவை இல்லை. பள்ளி சான்றிதழ், நிரந்தர கணக்கு அட்டை, ஓய்வூதிய உத்தரவு, ஓட்டுநர் உரிமம், வாக்காளர் அடையாள அட்டை உள்ளிட்டவற்றை பாஸ்போர்ட் விண்ணப்பத்துக்கு பிறந்த தேதிக்கான ஆவணங்களாக அவர்கள் பயன்படுத்தலாம்.

பாஸ்போர்ட் பெறுவதற்கான சட்ட விதிகளில் நீண்ட காலமாகவே எந்த திருத்தமும் மேற்கொள்ளப்படாமல் இருந்தது.

கிராமங்கள் மற்றும் ஊரக பகுதிகளில் வசிக்கும் பெரும்பாலானவர்களிடம் பிறப்பு சான்றிதழ் இருக்காது என்பதால், அது பற்றி முடிவு எடுக்கப்படவில்லை. தற்போது முதற்கட்டமாக இந்த முடிவு எடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Ban on wrist watches for Inter exam: TGBIE

Ban on wrist watches for Inter exam: TGBIE

Mar 2, 2025, 0:05 IST

Hyderabad: Telangana State Board of Intermediate Education (TGBIE) has decided to ban all types of wrist watches inside exam centres to curb malpractice.

With over five lakh students set to appear for the intermediate public examinations from March 5, authorities have decided to ban all types of electronic gadgets inside exam centres.

"The blanket ban comes as smartwatches have increasingly been used by students to cheat during exams, making it impractical for officials to check every watch individually," said TGBIE secretary, Krishna Aditya.

He added, "All necessary measures, including CCTV surveillance at centres, were taken to curb malpractices. Students will not be allowed to carry any electronic gadgets inside exam halls, including mobile phones, digital devices, and watches. The decision to ban watches entirely was taken due to the logistical challenge of checking each watch in such large numbers. However, students can rely on wall clocks placed in rooms."

HC orders against Tiruvarur dt collectors since 2023 for inaction against panchayat member

HC orders against Tiruvarur dt collectors since 2023 for inaction against panchayat member

Suresh Kumar

Mar 1, 2025, 0:56 IST

HC orders against Tiruvarur dt collectors since 2023 for inaction against panchayat member

Chennai: Madras high court on Friday directed the Tamil Nadu chief secretary to initiate action against those who held the post of Tiruvarur district collector since March 2, 2023, for failing to take action against a panchayat ward member who had filed a false affidavit during the election to the civic body.

Every candidate who contests in an election, irrespective of their election, is liable to be prosecuted for suppressing information in their affidavits, a division bench of Justice R Subramanian and Justice G Arul Murugan said.

The court also censured the Tamil Nadu State Election Commission (TNSEC) for submitting that only the govt officials concerned could pursue complaints of filing false affidavits by candidates. "This is a classic case where due to official apathy, a person who filed false information in an election affidavit not only completed his tenure but also escaped any consequence of criminal action," the bench said.

The issue pertains to a plea moved by D Sarathbabu. According to the petitioner, he lodged a complaint with the TNSEC in August 2021, alleging that district panchayat member S Papa Subramaniyan filed a false affidavit suppressing facts about the wealth owned by him and his family. The commission forwarded the complaint to the collector. An inquiry was conducted, and it was found that the district panchayat member suppressed details about his wealth in the election affidavit.

Seven months after the inquiry, a report was sent to the district SP to initiate criminal prosecution. The police submitted that for offences under Section 177 (furnishing false information to a public servant) of IPC, a complaint should be filed only by the returning officer concerned before the jurisdictional judicial magistrate. However, the TNSEC submitted that once the election is completed, such complaints could only be forwarded to the govt officials concerned.

‘Vijay can win if TVK goes it alone’

‘Vijay can win if TVK goes it alone’

Mar 2, 2025, 0:11 IST

Chennai: Actor Vijay stands a good chance to win Tamil Nadu if TVK goes it alone in the 2026 assembly election, according to poll strategist Prashant Kishor.

"Let him (Vijay) start and we'll see next six, eight months and then we'll make a public announcement whether we are going all alone or we would have somebody as an ally. I am not seeing any alliance right now. At least not till Dec. As things stand we are going it alone," Kishor said in an interview to a Tamil channel.

Edappadi K Palaniswami's AIADMK, however, approached him for "an association" said Kishor. He said the AIADMK wants to unite the anti-DMK vote and is engaged in traditional politics of bringing everyone together to defeat the rival arithmetically. But Kishor said neither Vijay nor he is looking at it. Kishor, who quit being a poll strategist and floated the Jan Suraaj Party four years ago, was present at the TVK event to mark the beginning of its second year.

"My understanding and data suggest that if Vijay goes it alone, he stands a very good chance to win TN provided he puts an effort and a number of hours and we are together able to build a political infrastructure around him. He genuinely wants to bring about a change in TN," Kishor said.

Rejecting the narrative that Vijay would have to forge an alliance with the AIADMK to have any impact and to get a sizeable number of seats given the DMK's formidable alliance, Kishor said poll arithmetic was not guaranteed. "I am looking at Vijay and TN politics as it stands today. I see there is a huge gap. A vast section of society is looking for a new, cleaner, and fresher alternative. Vijay fits the bill," he said. On why the actor was not harsh on his ideological enemy, the BJP, unlike against the DMK, Kishor said BJP was neither a force in TN nor governing it.

Kishor, who was the poll strategist for DMK in the 2021 assembly election, said DMK alliance was facing huge anti-incumbency. What if Stalin is projected as the face of DMK? "Even if it is, no one can deny a huge anti-incumbency. There's substantial erosion in the DMK alliance vote share, and a large chunk of that vote came based on being a "secular, anti-BJP, anti-Delhi party", he said. He charged DMK with creating "a fear psychosis against BJP and Delhi" whether it is sanatana dharma, delimitation or language policy.

Kishor acknowledged that he was not an advisor to Vijay but a ‘friend and brother'. Vijay would be free after his last film assignment and would become a full-time politician.

"I am committed to help, and I am sure he is committed to help me in Bihar as well," Kishor said, adding that the actor had a huge following in Bihar and could help Jan Suraaj by making an appearance and campaigning for the party. The assembly election in Bihar is scheduled to be held later this year.

NEWS TODAY 21.12.2025