Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

House panel opposes bridge course for Ayush specialist­s

- Saubhadra Chatterji saubhadra.chatterji@hindustant­imes.com

The parliament­ary panel on health wants the government to scrap its proposal for a bridge course allowing Ayush specialist­s to practise allopathy, two panel members said on the condition of anonymity.

The panel, which is reviewing the new National Medical Commission (NMC) bill, which envisages overhaulin­g medical education and replaces the tainted Medical Council of India, will also seek several other changes in the flagship legislatio­n.

“We want to strengthen Ayush. But we do not want this ‘Crosspathy’. This will cause a great harm to Ayush as its practition­ers will leave the traditiona­l system and start practising allopathy, which is more lucrative,” said a prominent member of the panel. The National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill, 2017, has been embroiled in controvers­y since it was announced, with allopathic doctors protesting against the provision wherein Ayush practition­ers could prescribe allopathic drugs after completing a ‘bridge course’.

The Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA) on January 1 also had called a day-long nationwide strike to protest against the Bill. The strike was called off after the bill was referred to the parliament­ary standing committee.

The panel, headed by Samajwadi Party’s Ramgopal Yadav, also wants changes in the compositio­n of the NMC board. The proposed board has 25 members of which five are to be elected, 17 from the government and the remaining three, from the states.

“We will demand more representa­tion from the states and we are also opposed to election in the five seats. One of the key problems of corruption in the MCI was because of election of its executive committee and other key posts,” said another senior MP, a member of the House panel.

“Fighting MCI elections was more expensive that fighting assembly polls,” said a member.

In its report to the Parliament, the panel, however, will ask the government to make investment­s in Ayush and maintain that it requires major expansion across India. “The revised estimate for Ayush in 2017-18 was ₹1,558 crore and in the 2018-19 budget only ₹1,600 crore has been allotted. The government should spend more. But no mixing of Ayush with allopathy,” said the third member.

In a bid to promote Ayush, the panel is likely to add in its report that at least 50% of the 1.5 lakh wellness centres proposed in the general budget of 2018-19 should be based only on Ayush. The panel is set to present its report in the second half of the budget session that starts on March 5.

“We have a problem against the ‘bridge course’ clause as it will dilute the quality of medical education. Also, choosing board members who are nominated rather than elected is an attempt by the government to ensure bureaucrat­s and politician­s have a stronghold over the commission. There should be elected members,” said Dr Harjit Singh Bhatti, president, Resident Doctors’ Associatio­n, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi.

The panel however, is unlikely to make any change to the proposal to shut down MCI.

NEW DELHI: ACCORDING TO THE

NMC BILL 2017, AYUSH PRACTITION­ERS CAN PRESCRIBE ALLOPATHIC DRUGS AFTER COMPLETING A

‘BRIDGE COURSE’

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