Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

‘Write prescripti­on in capital letters’

- Subhash Mishra letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

DHANBAD: The Jharkhand government has made it mandatory for government and private doctors to write prescripti­ons for patients in capital letters.

In a notificati­on issued on Friday, the state government has mandated doctors of all government hospitals and private nursing homes to follow the Indian Medical Council (Profession­al Conduct, Etiquette and Ethics) Regulation­s, 2002, which seeks to mention generic name of drugs apart from writing prescripti­ons in capital letters only.

Issued by Akhauri Shashank Sinha, deputy secretary of health, medical education and family welfare department, the notificati­on directed doctors to ensure prescripti­ons are written in clear, capital letters and prescribe rational drugs only.

The notificati­on was issued in the wake of a Medical Council of India (MCI) directive released on September 28, 2016, asking every physician to prescribe drugs with generic names legibly and in capital letters.

“He/she shall ensure there is rational prescripti­on and use of drugs,” the directive said.

A senior official of the state health department said violation of these notified MCI regulation­s would invite a warning in the first instance, suspension of registrati­on for a certain period in the second, and cancellati­on of registrati­on in the third.

Government and private doctors in Jharkhand have, however, been ignoring the MCI directive over the last two years.

The Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA) and the Jharkhand Health Service Associatio­n (JHSA), the frontal organisati­on of private doctors and state government medical officers, respective­ly, have mixed reactions to Friday’s notificati­on. Both are apprehensi­ve that it may increase patients’ problems.

IMA state president Dr AK Singh said since writing prescripti­ons in capital letters had now become a rule, doctors would have to follow it but it would indirectly create problems for patients.

“A long line of patients appears at most hospitals and health centres. If a doctor writes in capital letters, one prescripti­on would take a minimum of 10-15 minutes. Thus, several patients would have to return without prescripti­ons,” he said.

Singh said a delegation would approach the government with a request to rationalis­e the directive.

JHSA general secretary Dr Bimlesh Kumar Singh said medical officers would have no problem writing prescripti­ons in capital letters but it would affect patients.

“At medical colleges, sadar hospitals and community health centres, about 800-1,000 patients come for treatment daily. Medical officers would not be able to write so many prescripti­ons in capital letters in a limited timespan,” he said.

 ?? BIJAY/HT PHOTO ?? ■ Prescripti­on issued by a doctor in Dhanbad on Thursday.
BIJAY/HT PHOTO ■ Prescripti­on issued by a doctor in Dhanbad on Thursday.

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