Kolkata: More than 500 medical students and
junior doctors will hit the city's streets on Wednesday to protest against the
Centre's move to introduce the National Exit Test (NEXT) for MBBS graduates and
also the abolition of the Medical Council of India.
Union Health Ministry has proposed NMC Bill
2017, thereby replacing the Medical Council of India (MCI) with National
Medical Commission (NMC), a new body and also to introduce the NEXT. If the
proposed bill is cleared by the Parliament, the students who had already been
selected through the National Eligibility and Entrance Test (NEET) would be
asked to appear for NEXT after the completion of their MBBS degree at the end
of five years.
To qualify themselves as doctors and to
secure registration for clinical practice, one has to clear the exit
examination. MBBS graduates will have to clear the exit examination for getting
license for medical practice. The exit exam would also be serving as the
National Eligibility cum Entrance Test, NEET for candidates willing to pursue
post-graduate studies. The test is likely to be at the level of an MBBS final
exam to assess the basic knowledge and skills of a medical graduate. Hundreds of junior doctors from various
medical colleges in the city will take part in the protest rally wearing their
apron on Wednesday. The rally will be jointly organised by the students' unions
of various medical colleges and Progressive Junior Doctors' Association.
The rally will start at around 3 pm from gate
number 6 of Calcutta Medical College and Hospital (CMCH) and pass through
Central Avenue and College Street before ending at gate number 2 of CMCH.
The proposed exit examination has raised
several concerns among the students who study an exhaustive curriculum on
modern medicine for five-and-half years, including one year internship as
stipulated by the Medical Council of India. The introduction of NEXT would put
a question on the efficiency of the universities providing MBBS degree and
their evaluation systems. NEXT would lead to discrimination against Indian
graduates.
The proposed National Medical Commission (NMC)
will consist of four autonomous boards which will take care of medical
education at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels, assess the medical
institutions and will register practitioners.
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