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Thursday, 16 April 2015

Hospitals to find hard to deal with ''ghost faculty'' with RFID coming

With the Medical Council of India stressing on Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) system to track the teaching staff, the medical colleges both in the government as well as private sector will find it hard to recruit ''ghost faculty'' (who actually do not exist and remain on paper only) for a day at the time of annual inspections. Many of the colleges resort to such practice so that they get approvals from MCI for increasing the number of seats.

Various Medical organisations such as the Indian Medical Association and the Kerala Government Medical College Teachers Association (KGMCTA) have welcomed the move to introduce biometric scanners. However, they also opined that apart from the new systems that the MCI is introducing, an overall revamp of the medical education system is the need of the hour.

The MCI has given instructions to all Medical colleges to immediately set up the RFID system. Through the system, The details of the attendance of doctors can be monitored even from Delhi, which will help in ensuring that that no impersonation is taking place during routine inspections.

The new instructions gain significance in the wake of concerns raised among the medical fraternity with respect to the redeployment of doctors to the two new medical colleges at Idukki and Manjeri.


Indian Medical Association national president A Marthanda Pillai said that IMA supported the move to make the system fool proof but this only cannot bring in any comprehensive change in the whole system. ''We have to see how far the system is going to be effective, he said but cautioned that problems could also crop up if more stringent measures are brought in.
Source: The new Indian express 

Functioning of govt Hospitals likely to be affected

With mass retirement of doctors, especially specialists, in the government hospitals lastmonth and in the coming month, the patient care at these hospitals are going to be 
badly hit even as it is alleged that the government is showing no efforts in filling the 
vacant posts. Moreover, the medical fraternity is of the opinion that once the due 
promotions are affected, vacancies could be opened up in the lower levels, which could  fill the gap of  doctors. 
 
It has been said that despite the PSC rank list of about 3,500 candidates two years 
ago, advice memo had only been sent to as many as 1083 candidates till now.  It is also alleged that for the last two years promotions are due to specialist doctors in the 
health service. 
 
Both the Kerala Government Medical Officers Association (KGMOA) the Kerala 
Government Specialist Doctors Association (KGSDA) have come out against the delay in filling the vacancies. It is alleged that the government that was now only interested in building Medical Colleges was giving no importance to primary and tertiary health 
care. The associations said that patient care has already been affected and is going to 
be worse in the coming days. 

Stating that most of the vacancies have not been reported, KGSDA secretary Dr Sunjith Ravi said that about 120 specialists have retired in March and about 100 could go in May, which is going to create a void in the health service. He opined that vacancies could be filled up in the lower levels only if due promotions are affected. Its about two years that promotions are due in the health service, he said.

Source: The new Indian express 
http://epaper.newindianexpress.com/479851/The-New-Indian-Express-Thiruvananthapuram/15-04-2015#page/4/1

Saturday, 11 April 2015

centre calls for relaxing norms of medical regulatory bodies

Stressing the need for a drastic change in medical education, Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare Jagat Prakash Nadda said that the government was for relaxing the norms of regulatory bodies to give an impetus to medical education.

''The regulatory measures need a fresh thinking, a rethinking. Discussions are on with Medical Council of India and the Indian Medical Association and we are trying to convince them that we should be pragmatic,'' he said here after laying the foundation stone for new women’s hostel building and Dental College additional block at the Medical College.

Noting that medical education was facing a double challenge, he said the first challenge was lack of resources, mainly man power and the second one was that of maintaining quality of education. He stressed the need for a balance between quantity and quality in medical education. ''As per the WHO standards the doctor- patient ratio is 1: 1000 but we have 1: 1674 now. When 14 lakh doctors are needed in the country, we have only 7 to 8 lakh doctors. There is a need to address the issue at the earliest,'' he said.


Moreover, there is also a regional imbalance with regard to Medical institutions. While 65 per cent of the medical institutes are in Southern and Western India, the northern and eastern parts are unaddressed, the minister said. ''Of the 6640 districts, 400 districts do not have medical institutions. We are now planning to upgrade 100 district hospitals to medical colleges so that all the regions get at least one medical institute. With 100 more seats in each of the colleges, we can have 10,000 more doctors,'' he said.

Source: The New Indian Express

Kerala to get AIIMS: Minister

Dismissing concerns over delay in granting All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) to the state, Union Health Minister J P Nadda assured that the state will get AIIMS. ''The Centre is committed to start AIIMS in all the states. Kerala is one of the states where we are going to start it,'' he said.
Nadda made the assurance after laying the foundation stone for new women’s hostel building, dental College additional block at the Medical College here. The government had given a memorandum related to AIIMS, he said. ''We respect the sentiments of the state regarding AIIMS and assure that we will go forward with it,'' he said.
Nadda also said that the Centre has received representation of four locations that have been identified by the state government for setting up AIIMS. ''We have decided to go ahead with the proposal and a team will come here and decide on it,'' he said.

He said that though health is a state subject, the Centre would always suport the state's initiatives. '' I assure you that whatever needed here will be taken care of. The state will gets its due share to keep the pace of development,'' he said.


Tuesday, 7 April 2015

IMA comes out with food policy document

Noting that scant attention is being paid to food safety in general and child nutrition in particular, the Indian Medical Association (IMA) has called for reversing this alarming situation and suggested that good quality and affordability are the key requirements to an ideal food culture. The IMA, Kerala Chapter made the observation in its Food Policy Document 2015 that will be released by Chief Minister Oommen Chandy and Health Minister V S Sivakumar on World Health Day, which falls on Tuesday.

The IMA has come out with a food policy document with the theme of World Health Day 2015 being 'food safety'. In its in its guidelines on Safe and Healthy Food, the IMA said that every one including the authorities, organisations and citizens have to be aware about safe and healthy food and that it should never be a reason for disease.


The IMA under 27 different heads has highlighted the importance of taking a wholesome food that provide adequate calories and nutrients. It stresses that good quality and affordability are the key requirements to an ideal food culture.

Source: The Newindian express 

IMA Plans big on Organ Donation

With lack of awareness among the people on organ donation and a significant number of patients awaiting transplantation, the Indian Medical Association (IMA), Kerala Chapter, has stepped in to find donors for these patients with its various awareness campaigns across the state.

''The IMA has stepped in to help the patients find altruistic donors in accordance with its motto of the year “For the profession, for the people”. We aim at spreading awareness on brain death, voluntary organ donation and transplantation of various organs,'' said IMA Committee for Organ Donation state convenor Dr S Vasudevan.

With a number of voluntary organisations coming forward to join the IMA's initiative, he said that the association will be acting as an umbrella organisation. ''The Society for Organ Retrieval & Transplantation and others have come forward to associate with us,'' he said and added that it would give accelerate the efforts.

Vasudevan also said that a a registry with details of all those wiling to donate organs will be created. ''The association will accept consent forms from people who are willing to donate organs. They would be given donor cards and certificates and a registry will then be created. The first voluntary consent was given by Chairman of the Committee Dr Vinay Ranjan,'' he said.


Further, he said that the Association will reach the common man at various levels through its public meetings, workshops, awareness classes and other programmes. The association will be conducting various awareness programmes at educational institutions, residential colonies and other public places.

Source: The Newindian Express

Monday, 6 April 2015

Political pressure lands survey official out

With political pressure mounting from various service organisations, a senior official in the survey department, who is second in command, has been shifted from the post, stating that she is not eligible for the post. It was the same government that gave E R Sobhana a provisional promotion in 2012 taking into consideration her administrative skills. 
 
And the strange thing is that the government, allegedly under pressure from the service organisations, had given charge of the additional director to a deputy director against whom the vigilance had recommended suspension and even demoting him on various allegations. 
It is alleged that Sobhana was removed from the post as she had been taking stern action against corrupt officials, especially joint/deputy directors and even district survey officials, which has now agitated the service organissations. She even transferred certain people who were siting idle for years at the directorate to other offices, which is alleged to have angered certain union leaders.

As per the government order dated April 4, 2015, it is said that ''some service organisations have represented to government requesting to review the appointment of Sobhana as additional director''. It said that there was no provision in the Special rules of Survey and land records department to promote a person directly to the post pf Additional Director from deputy director in the absence of qualified persons in the cadre of Joint Director. It also said that Sobhana was not eligible for provisional promotion as per rule 31 a (i) of Kerala State & Subordinate Service Rules and as such her appointment was cancelled.


It should be noted that the government in its order dated September 20, 2012, had given provisional promotion to her evoking rule 9 a (i) of the same Kerala State & Subordinate Service Rules. Apart from this, the 2012 order states that she was being given promotion as the two joint directors could not be given promotion as several vigilance inquires were pending against them and were facing action. It also said that one of the joint directors was facing criminal charges at the Peroorkada police station. Sobhana was given promotion as the post was lying vacant from 2000 and the activities of the department was affected. Moreover, the seniority and promotion list in some of the sections are pending for a long time that had led the government to take such a step.

Source: The New Indian express

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