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Pull gives push to MMC
EXPRESS NEWS SERVICE
MUMBAI, May 2: A deputy secretary in Chief Minister Manohar Joshi's office
is pressuring the Maharashtra Medical Council (MMC) to grant a permanent
registration certificate to his daughter though she has not completed the
statutory internship of one year.
In a communication to the registrar of the Maharashtra Medical Council on
the official letter-head of the Chief Minister's secretariat, deputy
secretary B A Pande said his daughter, Smita, had been given provisional
registration by the MMC on May 8, 1996. As per a Bombay University letter of
July 8, 1996, the Lokmanya Tilak Medical College had condoned 55 days of her
internship but deemed that she had completed a year as required.
``In view of the aforesaid circumstances, you are requested kindly to grant
her a permanent registration certificate,'' Pande urged the MMC.
Pande's letter along with the stand taken by the LTM College as well as
the Bombay University was discussed at length at the two-day executive
committee meeting of the Maharashtra Medical Council. ``While Pande's plea
was rejected, the decision of the LTM College dean as well as that of the
Bombay University was strongly criticised at the meeting,'' according to a
senior Medical Council member.
Most of the members felt that it was pressure tactics on the part of the
official in the Chief Minister's secretariat. ``We feel that official
stationery should not be allowed to be used for such purposes,'' they said.
They remarked that it was wrong on the part of the college administration as
well as the university to waive the internship period. ``It violated the
rules prescribed by the Medical Council of India,'' they pointed out.
In fact, in view of repeated requests from erring students, the MMC had
referred the dispute to the Medical Council of India (MCI) for opinion. ``On
internship, the MCI had made it clear that at the most a period of 30 days,
and that too for exceptional reasons, can be condoned,'' the MMC member
said.
Medical Council of India deputy secretary K K Arora informed the MMC that
the Council's executive committee was of the firm opinion that no reduction
in the period of 12 months' compulsory rotating internship as envisaged in
the undergraduate medical curriculum can be allowed under any circumstances.
However, a marginal adjustment not exceeding 30 days should be made under
very exceptional circumstances with the approval of the MCI, the committee
stated.
In the present case, it appears that the LTM College dean as well as the
authorities of the Bombay University completely ignored the MCI guidelines.
In fact, when disputes of this nature were in the past referred to the MCI,
it had conveyed identical views to the registrars of all the universities
and the deans of all the medical colleges in the country.
Copyright © 1997 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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