MCI finds Chintpurni medical college lacking again, wants admission ban for two sessions
CHANDIGARH: There is fresh trouble for Pathankot-based Chintpurni Medical College. The Medical Council of India has written to the Centre that the college be debarred from admitting students in the MBBS course for next two sessions (2017-18, and 18-19) for it has again failed to meet numerous parameters as found during an inspection held last month.
The MCI executive committee made the recommendation, saying the college management was found grossly deficient even after it had given an undertaking that it has upgraded the infrastructure as required to run the MBBS course.
The medical body has also decided not to consider the institute’s request for introducing postgraduate courses from this session.
Also, the management has been issued a show-cause notice as to why the recommendation for withdrawal of recognition of the courses run by the institute should not be made.
College chairman Swaran Salaria said it was wrong to say that the college have been debarred from admitting students for next two sessions. “As per the MCI notice, the college was given an opportunity to rectify the deficiencies as raised in the MCI report. I have already submitted the compliance report and am very much confident that the college will be allowed to admit students in the MCI’s review meeting,” he said.
However, the development is enough for the students of existing batches to resume their demand for shifting elsewhere. The first batch of the college enrolled in 2011-12 has already been shifted out to other colleges after the intervention of Punjab and Haryana high court in 2015. The petition regarding the shifting of second-batch students is pending and will be heard on coming Monday.
The parents of the students have already submitted a memorandum to new Congress-led Punjab government to cancel permissions to the college for management’s continuous failure to provide facilities at the college and the 300-bed hospital attached to it.
Sushil Garg of Bathinda, father of a student, said the college has been faltering time and again, putting the career of their wards in a jeopardy. “The latest report again vindicates our stand and reaffirm our demand to shift our children to other colleges,” he said
It is for the fourth time that MCI gave a negative report about college’s functioning. The state medical department, too, had found gross deficiencies in its own report last year.