
The Association of Health Care Providers India (AHPI) called for a radical transformation of the National Medical Commission (NMC), which regulates medical education and experts in the country.
Despite its founding promise transparent and reform -oriented reform in medical education and the provision of health care, NMC has not largely been provided by permanent system changes, AHPI wrote the Prime Minister Narendra Modim 10 July.
AHPI represents hospitals, clinics, diagnostic centers and medical equipment. Her appeal comes against the background of the Central Investigation Office (CBI), which recently found that alleged cases of corruption include officials of the Ministry of Health, intermediary, NMC evaluators and representatives of the Faculty of Medicine.
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According to AHPI, the revelation emphasizes the permanent influence of the “Raj” inspector and requires urgent reform. The prevailing public perception, especially among healthcare professionals, is that NMC offers a small difference from the former Medical Council of India, which it replaced, said.
In the letter of Dr. Girdhar Gyani, CEO, AHPI has proposed the transformation of the NMC that it is primarily a procedural regulatory body to a prospective autonomous institution focused on innovation, performance evaluation and constant improvement in medical education. He proposed implementation further as a nationwide screening mechanism.
“The national leaving test (hereinafter), if effectively performed, is assumed as a transparent and objective measure for evaluation of disciplinary results and institutional performance.
Dr. Alexandar Thomas, patron, AHPI, called for digital tools, remote monitoring and real -time data to reduce human discretion, prevent secret agreement and soon detect incorrect practices.
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The NMC should lead a proposal of curriculum, faculty training and accreditation.
AHPI said that with the decisive management, the state of the administrative record and the political direction provided in health policy in 2017, NMC can be transformed into a highly impact institution that promotes transparency, strictness and integrity in medical education, especially in efforts to open more medical universities.
The association offered to submit detailed recommendations and support the Office of the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Health in carrying out these meaningful reforms.
Previously, Mint reported that the NMC has an acute labor shortage, with only two members working against the requirements of another 18 members to take care of the functioning of medical faculties and reforms in medical education.
(Tagstotranslate) Healthcare