Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Chintpurni medical college gets govt notice

The notice was sent to the college on Wednesday.

- Vivek Gupta vivek.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH : : After the Gian Sagar Medical College and Hospital, Banur, the Punjab government has now set in motion the process to close the Pathankotb­ased Chintpurni medical college by serving a show-cause notice on it.

The government on Wednesday directed the college management, headed by BJP leader Swaran Salaria, to respond within seven days as why “essentiali­ty certificat­es” issued in 2010 to set up the college and starting its medical courses should not be withdrawn. The notice says the state will take the responsibi­lity of students already enrolled in the college if permission­s are withdrawn.

Salaria was recently in the news when he announced to take over Gian Sagar college but backed out later. “If no satisfacto­ry response is received, the department of medical education will immediatel­y withdraw all permission­s to the college,” read a seven-page notice, copy of which is with HT.

Punjab medical education secretary Vikas Partap said the notice was issued keeping in mind gross deficienci­es in college functionin­g found during the department’s inspection­s in November last year and March this year. Sources said the chief minister’s office (CMO) and the attorney general were in the loop before the notice was served.

The college with an annual intake of 150 MBBS students has a strength of 300. Of these, 150 students enrolled in the 2014-15 session are already fighting a legal battle in the Punjab and Haryana high court demanding they be shifted to other medical college.

WHAT INSPECTION REPORT SAYS

The notice enclosed two inspection reports dated November 18, 2016 and March 14, 2017. The latest report says that no administra­tive staff, including the principal, were available during inspection and the faculty list was not provided either.

It says there were fewer patients in the outpatient department (OPD) as against 171 patients in the register since the figure was inflated. “Even the emergency ward register had one post-surgery patient. The labs, blood bank and radio diagnosis department wore a deserted look,” the report says.

It stated the management did not take any action despite assurances to the state government and the Supreme Court-appointed committee led by Justice RM Lodha to improve college’s infrastruc­ture as per the Medical Council of India (MCI) norms.

GETS ONE WEEK TO RESPOND AS TO WHY PERMISSION­S TO SET UP COLLEGE SHOULD NOT BE WITHDRAWN

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