The Sunday Guardian

Doctors’ lobby opposes ordinance making medical education transparen­t

- NAVTAN KUMAR NEW DELHI

The country’s strong doctors’ lobby is opposing the Centre’s move to bring about transparen­cy and efficiency in the medical education sector by promulgati­ng the Indian Medical Council (Amendment) Ordinance, 2018, supersedin­g the Medical Council of India (MCI).

Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA), the main umbrella body of over 2.5 lakh doctors, wants the election process of MCI to continue. The election to MCI has already been announced as the tenure of 60 out of 103 members is coming to an end in the next twothree months.

IMA Action Committee, which held an emergency session recently in Mumbai, condemned the “suppressio­n” of MCI and termed the government move as “unwarrante­d and mala fide”. The committee has also decided to resist the National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill.

IMA is shielding the MCI despite the fact that it has a long history of failures. It has been placed under the supervisio­n of five court- and government-appointed bodies. However, the doctors’ lobby fears that their power would be lost in the new system.

According to an IMA statement, directors of major national institutio­ns would hardly find time to administer more than 450 medical colleges and their PG and UG courses. “IMA is convinced that suppressio­n of MCI is only a smoke screen and is a ploy to prepare the ground for NMC and sabotage the democratic process of MCI… IMA will continue its resistance to the NMC Bill. Any intentions of the NMC Bill implemente­d through the appointed Board of Governors

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