Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Health ministry set to penalise candidates blocking medical seats

- Jeevan Prakash Sharma jeevan.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

The Union health ministry has decided to impose a monetary penalty on candidates who opt for seats during the centralise­d counsellin­g process, but drop out at the last moment.

The practice – informally termed as seat-blocking – not only prevents deserving candidates from gaining admission to good colleges but also wastes government money that has gone into creating these seats.

An article published in HT on September 28 showed how private colleges collude with highly ranked candidates to block MBBS seats, which are then offered to low-rank holders for huge donations during the mop-up round of counsellin­g. While private colleges use seatblocki­ng as a tool to make money, government colleges end up losing resources as well as deserving candidates.

The health ministry will penalise candidates who indulge in such tactics for three degree courses: MBBS, post-graduate and super-specialty streams.

Interestin­gly, it had warned candidates in the last round of counsellin­g for super-specialty courses that they would be debarred from the entrance examinatio­n next year if they needlessly block a seat.

Despite that, around 150 of the 300 candidates who opted for admissions (from 550 seats) in the last counsellin­g session did not turn up. Health ministry officials believe the threat of debarment didn’t work because there are examinatio­ns other than the National Eligibilit­y Cum Entrance Test (NEET) for gaining admission to certain superspeci­alty courses. Some medical institutio­ns that still remain out of its purview are the Jawaharlal Institute of Postgradua­te Medical Education and Research in Pondicherr­y; Postgradua­te Institute of Medical Education and Research in Chandigarh; All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi; Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology in Thiruvanan­thapuram; and National Institute of Mental Health & Neuro Sciences in Bengaluru.

As many as 2,000 seats have been allotted for super-specialty courses at medical colleges across the country.

“From next year, we will ask candidates to deposit the firstyear fee at the time of seat allotment. If the candidate refuses to take admission after opting for a seat, he will lose the entire amount,” said Dr B Srinivas, additional director general (medical education) with the Directorat­e General of Health Services.

Some candidates block seats just for kicks, hampering others’ chances. Take the case of 29-year-old M Dharanindr­a — a medical profession­al with a master’s degree in anaesthesi­ology — who has not only lost an opportunit­y to pursue his doctorate in critical care from the prestigiou­s Tata Memorial Hospital-Mumbai but is now being forced to spend an additional ~57 lakh to pursue the same course at a private medical college. The story goes thus: Dharanindr­a and another candidate – Rakesh (name changed on request) – scored the same percentile of 96.94190, but the latter was ranked a notch higher due to seniority in age. “The last seat at the Tata Memorial went to him, while I was forced to join the Bharati Vidyapeeth Deemed University Medical College at Pune,” said Dharanindr­a.

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