Millennium Post

Admission to MBBS courses in AIIMS, JIPMER to be through NEET from 2020: Vardhan

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Admission to MBBS courses in medical colleges across the country including JIPMER and all the AIIMS will be through the common national entrance test NEET from 2020, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan announced on Friday.

Currently, admissions to all medical colleges except AIIMS and JIPMER (Jawaharlal Institute of Post-graduate Medical Education and Research) are made through the National Eligibilit­y cum Entrance Test (NEET).

“The common national entrance test - NEET - applicable to institutes of national importance like AIIMS and JIPMER and common counsellin­g for MBBS, as per the National Medical Commission Act, will come into force from the next academic year (2020).

“This will help set common standards in the medical education sector in the country,” Vardhan said.

The National Medical Commission Act, 2019 provides for common national entrance test - NEET - along with common counsellin­g for MBBS, and a common final year MBBS exam which will be applicable to all institutes including those of national importance like AIIMS.

AIIMS and JIPMER which function under the Union Health Ministry, conduct their own admission tests at present.

According to the NMC Act, the NEXT results would be the base for admission to PG courses and to obtain a licence to practice. It would also act as a screening test for foreign medical graduates.

Regulation­s for operationa­lising the NEXT would be made in due course, keeping in mind the importance of both theoretica­l as well as clinical skill sets required at the level of UG after consultati­on with all stakeholde­rs.

There is a three-year window before NEXT becomes operationa­l and the NMC would finalise the modalities of the exam, Vardhan said. “This provision will eliminate the need for students to approach multiple colleges and take part in multiple counsellin­g processes for admission. This will save students and their families unnecessar­y physical and financial trauma,” Vardhan had said earlier.

“Once a candidate clears NEXT, he can register himself and obtain a licence to practice. The Act does not impose any restrictio­n on the number of attempts at NEXT for improving the rank for admission to PG courses,” he had said.

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