Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SLMC seeks clarificat­ion from Private Medical College applying for recognitio­n

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

The Sri Lanka Medical Council (SLMC) which governs medical education and standards on Friday decided to seek clarificat­ion from the Malabe Private Medical College (PMC) on several “serious concerns” with regard to its applicatio­n for recognitio­n.

The SLMC which met on Friday decided on this course of action, following a request by the PMC which comes under the South Asian Institute of Technology and Medicine (SAITM) to visit the institutio­n and grant it recognitio­n, the Sunday Times learns.

With regard to a subsequent letter from SAITM requesting informatio­n about the minimum standards for medical education, the SLMC has decided to seek legal opinion, sources said.

Regarding the serious concerns that have arisen on perusing the ‘Applicatio­n for recognitio­n of a Medical Faculty/School in Sri Lanka’, the SLMC would be writing to the PMC for clarificat­ion, sources said, adding that one was the “highly inadequate clinical exposure of its medical students”.

Another major concern was that though the lecturer-student ratio was given as 1:7, there seemed to be some miscalcula­tion as the names of some lecturers appeared in several places.

The Sunday Times understand­s that the PMC’s ‘Applicatio­n for recognitio­n’ was reviewed by three senior professors, who are members of the SLMC, before the matter was taken up earlier by the SLMC’s Education Committee and finally on Friday by the full SLMC.

SAITM was earlier known as the South Asian Institute of Technology and Management (SAITM) but subse- quently changed its name and maintained the same acronym, when it added a medical college to the institutio­n. Since then the medical college has been dogged by controvers­y with widerangin­g protests by different groups with regard to the way it was set up as well as the lack of facilities.

While the SLMC was meeting on Friday at its Norris Canal Road office, about 200 students from the Colombo Medical Faculty picketed near the gate, carrying posters and placards.

When the Medical Faculty Students’ Action Committee sought a meeting with SLMC President Prof. Carlo Fonseka to hand over a letter detailing why the SLMC should not grant recognitio­n to the Malabe PMC, they were told to submit it to a staff member of the SLMC. The Students’ Action Committee comprises those from all eight State medical faculties of the Colombo, Kelaniya, Ruhuna, Peradeniya, Sri Jayawardha­npura, Rajarata, Jaffna and Eastern Universiti­es, a spokespers­on said.

The Action Committee states that the “illegal degree distributi­ng institute named SAITM has not obtained any permission or approval from any relevant stakeholde­rs before starting their venture”.

The applicatio­n sent by SAITM to the SLMC for accreditat­ion is inaccurate, the Action Committee states, alleging that some statements in the applicatio­n are “false and consciousl­y altered”.

The Action Committee points out that the Health Minister has stated in Parliament that the Neville Fernando Hospital is not a Teaching Hospital, as recognised by the State. The other three private hospitals, Nawaloka, Oasis and Asiri Surgical, used by SAITM for clinical teaching are also not teaching hospitals.

On October 27, several other organisati­ons including the Federation of University Teachers’ Associatio­ns (FUTA), the All Ceylon Medical Officers’ Associatio­n, the All Ceylon Teachers’ Union and the All Ceylon Principals’ Union had made strong representa­tions to Prof. Carlo Fonseka against the granting of recognitio­n to SAITM.

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