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Medical education has become business: Supreme Court
The medical profession and education have become a business and now the regulation of medical education has also gone that way which is the nation's tragedy, an anguished Supreme Court said on Tuesday, giving one chance to the Centre to put its "house in order" and take a call on reversing the changes made to the NEET Super Speciality Examination 2021 syllabus.
New Delhi: The medical profession and education have become a business and now the regulation of medical education has also gone that way which is the nation's tragedy, an anguished Supreme Court said on Tuesday, giving one chance to the Centre to put its "house in order" and take a call on reversing the changes made to the NEET Super Speciality Examination 2021 syllabus.
The apex court was not satisfied with the justification given by the Centre, National Board of Examination (NBE) and National Medical Commission (NMC) on making the last minute changes after the notification for examination was issued in July. "This is how botched up our education system has become," it said. A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachud, Vikram Nath and B V Nagarathna in an over two hour hearing gave time to the Centre, NBE and NMC to come up with a solution by Wednesday morning and said it will continue hearing the matter to avoid any prejudice to the young doctors.
"This matter is part heard and you can still put your house in order, we will give you time until tomorrow. We will not adjourn the part heard matter now as this will only cause prejudice to the students but we hope better sense prevails. If there is a sense of obduracy, then we are armed with law and they are long enough to reach out to the obduracy. We are giving you one opportunity to reform," the bench said.
The top court was hearing a batch of pleas of 41 Post Graduate doctors and others who have challenged the last minute changes made to the syllabus after the notification for examination was issued on July 23 for the test to be held on November 13 and 14. Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Aishwarya Bhati, appearing for the Centre, said the court should not get the impression that the last minute change in syllabus was done to fill vacant seats in private colleges and they will try to persuade the court to dispel this notion.
"We are getting a strong impression that the medical profession has become a business, medical education has become a business and the regulation of medical education has also become a business. That's the tragedy of the nation," the bench said. The authorities should show some concern for the students, as these are the students who do not start preparation for these course two or three months in advance but right from the time they join a Postgraduate course, they aspire for a super speciality, which requires years of commitment, it said.
The government has to balance out the investment made by the private sector in these medical colleges but it should equally think in the interest of the medical profession and the interest of students, the top court said. "The interest of students must weigh far higher because they are the people who are going to be a torch bearer of providing medical care and it seems perhaps we have forgotten them in the whole process," it said.
The top court said that prior to 2018, 100 per cent questions came from the feeder courses; from 2018 to 2020 there was major modification under which 60 per cent marks were from super specialisation and 40 per cent from the feeder super specialisation courses. "Now what is sought to be done is one hundred per cent questions will be from primary feeder speciality which is general medicines."
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