Beginning of end for tainted MCI: Cabinet OKs reforms
Mahendra K Singh and Durgesh Nandan Jha | TNN | Updated: Dec 16, 2017, 05:01 IST
NEW DELHI: The Union Cabinet on Friday cleared the national medical commission bill, which seeks to reduce red tape in medical education and give the government a say in fixing fees in up to 40% of seats in private medical colleges.
The bill seeks to replace the existing apex medical education regulator, Medical Council of India, (MCI) with a new body in an effort to increase transparency in the wake of corruption cases with regard to admissions to medical colleges.
While private medical colleges will still have the power to determine fees for the majority of seats, that for 40% of the seats will be decided by NMC, offering applicants some reprieve from exorbitant fees. TOIhad first reported on March 28, 2016, that in a health sector review PM Modi had called for the scrapping of MCI.
A four-member committee headed by the Niti Aayog vice-chairman drafted the NMC bill The bill proposes a common entrance exam and licentiate exam that all medical graduates will have to clear to practise, officials said. The exit exam will be treated as an entrance exam for PG courses. With NEET for MBBS courses and the exit exam, the multiplicity of exams will end.
The nod for the bill comes in the wake of several complaints against the MCI and its top officials, accused in the past of using its sweeping powers to derecognise medical colleges as well manipulate admissions to mint money. The new commission will have four boards — for undergraduate and PG medical education, medical assessment and rating, and ethics and medical registration.
As per the provisions of the draft bill, no permission would be needed to add seats or start PG courses. There will be fewer elected members in the commission. This has attracted the charge of the NMC being undemocratic but official sources said it would include well-regarded doctors and non-medical experts.
Under the MCI Act, 1956, medical colleges needed permission to be established and recognised, for renewal and increase in intake. The NMC bill reduces this to establishment and recognition. There will be no need for annual renewal. The MCI has been accused of being opaque in its accreditation process and the decision to do away with permissions in the new bill is aimed at addressing this, though the flip side could be less scrutiny for colleges.
Mahendra K Singh and Durgesh Nandan Jha | TNN | Updated: Dec 16, 2017, 05:01 IST
NEW DELHI: The Union Cabinet on Friday cleared the national medical commission bill, which seeks to reduce red tape in medical education and give the government a say in fixing fees in up to 40% of seats in private medical colleges.
The bill seeks to replace the existing apex medical education regulator, Medical Council of India, (MCI) with a new body in an effort to increase transparency in the wake of corruption cases with regard to admissions to medical colleges.
While private medical colleges will still have the power to determine fees for the majority of seats, that for 40% of the seats will be decided by NMC, offering applicants some reprieve from exorbitant fees. TOIhad first reported on March 28, 2016, that in a health sector review PM Modi had called for the scrapping of MCI.
A four-member committee headed by the Niti Aayog vice-chairman drafted the NMC bill The bill proposes a common entrance exam and licentiate exam that all medical graduates will have to clear to practise, officials said. The exit exam will be treated as an entrance exam for PG courses. With NEET for MBBS courses and the exit exam, the multiplicity of exams will end.
The nod for the bill comes in the wake of several complaints against the MCI and its top officials, accused in the past of using its sweeping powers to derecognise medical colleges as well manipulate admissions to mint money. The new commission will have four boards — for undergraduate and PG medical education, medical assessment and rating, and ethics and medical registration.
As per the provisions of the draft bill, no permission would be needed to add seats or start PG courses. There will be fewer elected members in the commission. This has attracted the charge of the NMC being undemocratic but official sources said it would include well-regarded doctors and non-medical experts.
Under the MCI Act, 1956, medical colleges needed permission to be established and recognised, for renewal and increase in intake. The NMC bill reduces this to establishment and recognition. There will be no need for annual renewal. The MCI has been accused of being opaque in its accreditation process and the decision to do away with permissions in the new bill is aimed at addressing this, though the flip side could be less scrutiny for colleges.
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