Title of article :
Crass commercialization and corruption of the Indian medical education system and the resultant decay of the Indian Health Education in the last two decades. A case for urgent international review and
Author/Authors :
Srinivas Ramachandra، Deshpande نويسنده Melmarvathur Adiparashakti Institute of Medical Sciences, Melmarvathur , , Gayathree Srinivas، Deshpande-Naik نويسنده Hassan Institute of Medical Sciences ,
Issue Information :
دوفصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Indian medical education system has seen rapid growth in the last two decades. Private
medical colleges now account for more than half of the 270 medical colleges in 2009. This
unregulated unequal growth brings two issues to focus: the failing quality of medical
education and implementing effective solutions to address an artificial faculty shortage
due to faculty mal-distribution. The menace posed by the unfettered merchandisation of
medical education has to be controlled and efforts should be made by the Government to
ensure maintenance of standards and check the unplanned growth of substandard
medical colleges and substandard education norms in universities or their constituent
medical colleges. Since Indian Independence, MCI nor the University Grants Commission
nor the constituent universities including the health sciences universities have never
attempted to grade medical colleges as per their quality standards hence in the absence of
health education quality standards, the student output from recent, hurriedly established
recent science institutions is definitely substandard.
There is a strong case for a review of the entire system of medical education and
examinations in the country. Some solutions like increasing retirement ages of MD faculty
to 70 years, sharing of faculty, increasing the total number of MD seats, allowing standard
institutions like IIT’s to take over substandard colleges, allowing clinical MDs to teach
para-clinical and pre-clinical subjects or temporary merger of specialties may address the
widely publicized faculty shortage instead of relying on inadequately qualified MSc. nonmedical
faculty.
Journal title :
Electronic Physician
Journal title :
Electronic Physician