Thursday, March 6, 2025

NMC guidelines on foreign medical graduates binding on State Medical Council, says Health Minister Satya Kumar


NMC guidelines on foreign medical graduates binding on State Medical Council, says Health Minister Satya Kumar

“The Registrar of the Andhra Pradesh Medical Council does not have any independent authority to modify the NMC guidelines issued from time to time,” Satya Kumar Yadav said

Published - March 05, 2025 03:00 am IST - VIJAYAWADA


Andhra Pradesh Medical and Health Minister Satya Kumar Yadav has asserted that the State government has to adhere to the guidelines issued by the National Medical Commission (NMC) on Foreign Medical Graduates (FMGs).

“The Registrar of the Andhra Pradesh Medical Council does not have any independent authority to modify the NMC guidelines issued from time to time,” Mr. Satya Kumar said on Tuesday (March 4, 2025).

“As per the NMC guidelines, the FMGs who studied online during their final year should have to do two years of internship (one year is clinical clerkship and one year is internship), and those who studied online during both penultimate and final years must complete three years of internship (two years will be clinical clerkship and one year internship), the Minister said in the Legislative Assembly.

Telugu Desam Party (TDP) MLAs Pusapati Aditi Vijayalakshmi Gajapathi Raju, Nelavala Vijayasree, and Gondu Sankara Rao served a notice under Rule 74 calling the attention of the Minister on ‘Problems of foreign medical graduates’.

The Minister, making a statement, said some FMGs who returned to India due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine War, and studied part of their MBBS course online, had requested the A.P. Medical Council to grant Permanent Registration after completing one year of internship as per the compensation certificates issued by the respective universities and also as per the NMC guidelines, he said.

After verification of the compensation letters submitted by the FMGs, it was found that they did not mention the period of online study and the period of compensation of online study with offline mode.

Hence, the A.P. Medical Council did not consider their applications for Permanent Registration, and they were directed to continue their Internship for a period of one more year to make-up for the loss of clinical training due to online study. But they ignored the orders of the A.P. Medical Council, the Minister said.

For FMGs who completed the entire course in the offline mode by staying abroad, Permanent Registrations were being granted after completion of one year of Internship in Andhra Pradesh.

A Compulsory Rotating Medical Internship (CRMI) is a one-year programme that the FMGs must complete in India after obtaining provisional registration from the State Medical Council. “The A.P. Medical Council is continuously communicating with the NMC for necessary instructions regarding the issues raised by the FMGs,” he added.

Published - March 05, 2025 03:00 am IST

Tambaram residents oppose water deposit hike, demand rollback


Tambaram residents oppose water deposit hike, demand rollback

Activist Govindarajan told TNIE that the deposit hike is unjustified, particularly given the unreliable water supply and ineffective installation of water meters.


Unreliable water supply also affects the residents of Tambaram Corporation.(Photo | Express)

Updated on:
05 Mar 2025, 10:36 am

CHENNAI: The residents of Tambaram City Municipal Corporation (TCMC) have strongly opposed the hike in water connection deposit from Rs 5,000 to Rs 7,500.

They criticised the corporation for implementing the hike without a public consultation, placing an additional financial burden on middle-class and low-income households.

Several residents, along with activists, including SM Govindarajan, president of the United Federation of Residents Welfare Associations, have appealed to Chief Minister MK Stalin, Municipal Administration Minister KN Nehru, and TCMC commissioner S Balachander through X to revoke the revised charges.

Although the deposit is refunded at the time of surrendering the service connection, it has caught those from financially backward families off guard, said residents.

Govindarajan told TNIE that the deposit hike is unjustified, particularly given the unreliable water supply and ineffective installation of water meters. The residents asked the corporation to ensure a regulated quantity and duration of supply before hiking the deposit. VS Jayaraman, another resident, said that he, along with several others like V Santhanam, had made several attempts to oppose the revised deposits but no action was taken.

Commenting over the issue, TCMC AIADMK floor leader G Sankar told TNIE that the issue was raised several times in the council but nothing was done to address the concerns of the residents before going ahead with the revised deposits.

Responding to the concerns, corporation commissioner Balachander told TNIE that the increase was made as per the corporation’s by-law. “Residents are not required to pay the revised charges in one go; they can opt for two or three instalments to ease the financial impact on them,” he stated.

Non-MBBS VC for medical university faces Rajasthan doctors' opposition


Non-MBBS VC for medical university faces Rajasthan doctors' opposition

Mar 5, 2025, 2:29 IST

Haribhau Bagde.

JAIPUR: Rajasthan's medical fraternity reacted with outrage Tuesday to governor Haribhau Bagde appointing someone with a doctoral degree in pharmaceutical sciences as vice chancellor of Rajasthan University of Health Sciences (RUHS), terming it "unacceptable" and threatening a statewide agitation if the decision wasn't revoked, reports Intishab Ali.

The state chapter of IMA has written to Bagde, saying Pramod Yeole being asked to take charge of RUHS was at odds with the institution's responsibility of setting high standards in medical education, and improving public health outcomes. Thirty medical colleges are affiliated to the university. Yeole was previously VC of Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University in Aurangabad and pro VC of Rashtrasant Tukadoji Maharaj Nagpur University.

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

முன் பதிவில் லாமல் முன் பதிவு பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்க டி-ரிசர்வ் டு டிக்கெட்!


3/5/25, 6:52 AM 

முன் பதிவில் லாமல் முன் பதிவு பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்க டி-ரிசர்வ் டு டிக்கெட்! 

விரைவு ரயில்களில் முன்பதிவு பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்க டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட்!

அவசரமாக ரயிலில் பயணிக்க வேண்டியவர்கள், முன்பதிவு செய்யாவிட்டாலும், முன்பதிவு பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்கும் வசதி உள்ளது. அதுதான் டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட். 

வட மாநில தொழிலாளர்களால், முன்பதிவு செய்த பெட்டியிலேயே, தங்களது இருக்கையில் நிம்மதியாக பயணிக்க முடியவில்லை என்று அண்மைக் காலமாக ரயில் பயணிகள் புலம்பி வரும் நிலையில், முன்பதிவு செய்யாமலேயே, முன்பதிவு பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்கும் வசதியை அளிக்கும் டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட் பற்றி அறிந்துகொள்ள வேண்டும். இது மிகவும் பழைய வசதிதான் என்றாலும், இது பற்றி பயணிகள் பலருக்கும் தெரியாமல் இருப்பதால்தான், இது பற்றி தற்போது விளக்கங்கள் வெளியாகி வருகிறது.

முன்பதிவு செய்யாமல், முன்பதிவு ரயில் பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்கும் வசதியை இந்த டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட் வழங்குகிறது.  இந்த டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட் முறையை தெற்கு ரயில்வே அறிமுகப்படுத்தி செயல்படுத்தி வருகிறது. இந்த டிக்கெட் எடுத்தவர்கள் முன்பதிவில்லா மற்றும் முன்பதிவு பெட்டிகளில் பயணிக்க முடியும். 

இந்த டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட்டை, ரயில் நிலையத்தில் உள்ள டிக்கெட் கவுண்டர்களில் மட்டுமே எடுக்க முடியும். 

இந்த சேவையை முன்பதிவு செய்ய முடியாது.  முன்கூட்டியே பெறவும் முடியாது. நாம் டிக்கெட் கேட்கும் ரயில் நிலையத்திலிருந்து ரயில் புறப்படுவதற்கு ஒரு மணி நேரத்துக்கு முன்பாக மட்டுமே இந்த டிக்கெட்டை எடுக்க முடியும். டிக்கெட் கவுண்டர்களில் டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட் என கேட்க வேண்டும். நாம் கேட்கும் ரயிலில் டி-ரிசர்வ்டு படுக்கை அல்லது இருக்கை காலியாக இல்லை எனில் வழங்கப்படாது. 

இந்த ரயில் டிக்கெட், ரயிலில் பயணிக்கும் தூரத்தைப் பொறுத்து கணக்கிடப்படுகிறது. அதிகபட்சம் 100 கிலோ மீட்டருக்குள்தான் இந்த டிக்கெட் மூலம் பயணிக்க முடியும். தெற்கு ரயில்வேயில் இயக்கப்படும் 35 ரயில்களில் டி-ரிசர்வ்டு படுக்கை வசதி பெட்டிகள் பயன்பாட்டில் உள்ளன. இந்த வசதியை மேலும் விரிவுபடுத்தவும் தெற்கு ரயில்வே திட்டமிட்டுள்ளது.

இந்த வசதி எப்படி செயல்படுத்தப்படுகிறது? உதாரணமாக கொல்லம் விரைவு ரயிலை எடுத்துக் கொள்வோம். இந்த ரயிலில் நெல்லை - சென்னை பயணிக்க ஒரு படுக்கை வசதி முன்பதிவு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளது. அப்போது நெல்லை - கொல்லம் வரை அந்த இடம் காலியாகவே இருக்கும். எனவே, இந்த காலியாக இருக்கும் படுக்கை வசதியை நெல்லை - கொல்லம் செல்லும் பயணி பயன்படுத்த அனுமதி அளிக்கும் வகையில் செயல்படுத்தப்பட்டிருப்பதே இந்த டி-ரிசர்வ்டு டிக்கெட். 

ஒருவர், முன்பதிவில்லா பெட்டியில் பயணிக்க டிக்கெட் எடுக்கும்முன்பு, அதே ரயிலில் டி-ரிசர்வ்டு இருக்கை காலியாக இருக்கிறதா என்பதை கேட்டுக் கொள்ள வேண்டும். இருந்தால், சற்று அதிகக் கட்டணம் செலுத்தி அந்த டிக்கெட் எடுத்து கூட்டம் இல்லாமல் பயணம் செய்யலாம். இல்லை என்றால் முன்பதிவில்லா டிக்கெட் எடுத்துக் கொள்ளலாம். 

Increase in undergraduate seats sought in three government medical colleges, says Health Minister

Increase in undergraduate seats sought in three government medical colleges, says Health Minister

The Hindu Bureau

CHENNAI  05.03.2025

Tamil Nadu has sought an increase in the number of MBBS seats at three government medical colleges at Namakkal, Tiruppur and Virudhunagar from 100 to 150 each, Health Minister Ma. Subramanian said shortly after meeting Union Health Minister J.P. Nadda in New Delhi on Tuesday.

The three medical colleges have infrastructure and faculty posts to accommodate 150 students each. “As of now, the intake is 100 seats each. We have asked for an additional 50 seats each,” he said.

Mr. Subramanian added that they have submitted a memorandum with 11 demands to the Union Health Minister.

The State has requested for sanction of another 24 urban and 26 rural primary health centres (PHC) and 500 health sub-centres (HSC) in the State. These additional centres were essential based on the population and requirement, he said.



Other demands

Strengthening of cancer care services in Tamil Nadu under the tertiary care initiative scheme at a cost of ₹447.94 crore, strengthening of neurosurgery departments, establishment of simulation and skill labs in 22 tertiary care institutions at ₹603.45 crore were also sought during the meeting.

The demand to establish a second All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Coimbatore was reiterated. On the progress of construction works at AIIMS, Madurai, Mr. Subramanian said that the State had taken up works for electricity connection and drinking water as asked by the AIIMS administration in Madurai.

He, along with the Health Secretary, would visit the site next week, he added.

Health Secretary P. Senthilkumar, Tamil Nadu House Resident Commissioner Ashish Kumar and National Health Mission Director, Tamil Nadu, Arun Thamburaj were present.

Monday, March 3, 2025

Dismissed employee entitled to leave encashment, rules HC


Dismissed employee entitled to leave encashment, rules HC

TNN

Feb 28, 2025, 23:47 IST

Dismissed employee entitled to leave encashment, rules HC

Bengaluru: An employee dismissed from service as a penalty is entitled to encashment of privilege leave, the Dharwad bench of Karnataka high court ruled recently. Justice M Nagaprasanna made this observation, while allowing the petition filed by one G Linganagouda.

A resident of Hosapete in Vijayanagara district, the petitioner was working as an assistant manager in Pragathi Krishna Grameena Bank. On March 31, 2012, the bank initiated disciplinary proceedings for certain misconduct, and ultimately on Dec 19, 2014, dismissed him from service. Thereafter, he submitted a representation seeking encashment of 220 days of accrued leave. However, the same was turned down by the management, citing misconduct. Linganagouda challenged the same.

After perusing the materials on record, Justice M Nagaprasanna noted that as per the judgements of the Bombay and Madhya Pradesh high courts, leave encashment to an employee is trite, a statutory right and the right to receive terminal benefits is recognised as a right to property obtaining under Article 300A of the Constitution of India.

"Article 300A mandates that persons not be deprived of property save by authority of law. Therefore, it becomes unmistakably clear that any attempt by the employer to take away the right of any part of terminal benefit, which in the case at hand is leave encashment, without any umbrage of a statutory provision, is sans countenance. Therefore, it is a right of an employee not only under the statute, even under the fountainhead of all statutes – the Constitution of India," the judge further observed.

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

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