Updated On: 22 March, 2011 06:38 AM IST | | Priyanka Vora
Doctors, including the dean, have been loaned from the short-staffed Grant Medical College to ensure new college at GT Hospital gets Medical Council of India recognition
Doctors, including the dean, have been loaned from the short-staffed Grant Medical College to ensure new college at GT Hospital gets Medical Council of India recognition
WHILE laying out and implementing its plan of starting new medical colleges, the state medical education department seems to have forgotten an element that some would consider important faculty to educate the students.
Although 35 doctors were relieved from duty at the GMC to join the new medical college at GT hospital, the doctors continue to work at GMC itself
But, the determined department has ensured that something as trivial as the shortage of teachers does not deprive aspiring doctors of an education and a degree.
And, if that means bending the rules, duping the Medical Council of India (MCI) and taking the risk of churning out doctors who may not know what they are doing, well, so be it.
The innovative work-around, which the department has perfected through years of practice, involves 'loaning' teaching doctors from a medical college to one which is slated for an inspection by the MCI.
The inspectors visit the college, are told that the loaned teachers actually teach there and then go back to take a decision on whether they should grant MCI recognition to the new department of the college.
The loaned teachers, meanwhile, go back to teach at their original college until they are asked to go somewhere else again.
Upping the ante
Now, however, the department has taken the game to a whole new level by using the same method to get MCI recognition for a whole new college to start an MBBS course.
An order (copy with MiD DAY) shows that nearly 35 doctors working as lecturers, associate professors and professors at the Grant Medical College (GMC) attached to JJ Hospital were relived from duty to join at the same positions in a proposed medical college attached to GT Hospital, which is awaiting MCI recognition.
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The list includes Dr T P Lahane, GMC's dean, who is supposed to have joined as the dean of the new medical college.
Although they were relieved from duty, the committed doctors continue to work at GMC.
"Whenever an MCI inspection is scheduled at a college, medical teachers from other colleges go there a day prior to the inspection and show that they are physically present in the college.
They go back to their parent college as soon as the inspection is over. This has been going on for a long time because of the scarcity of teaching doctors," said a senior doctor, requesting anonymity.
Senior officials at JJ Hospital, including Lahane himself, claim that only surplus staff has been relieved for the new medical college.
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The MCI, however, derecognised three departments of the hospital in 2009 psychiatry, radiology and forensic medicine due to shortage of doctors. In fact, the psychiatry department has only one professor.
"There is a 40 per cent shortage in staff at JJ Hospital itself. How can the teachers and the dean get relieved from GMC to join the new medical college at GT Hospital?" a senior doctor pointed out.
Lofty plans
If all goes well, the new medical college is scheduled to start taking in students from this academic year itself. And, apart from this, two medical colleges are also slated to commence operations in Nandurbar and Alibaug.
EXPERT SPEAK
Dr Randeep Guleria, MCI inspector and senior doctor at AIIMS, said, "If an institute relieves a set of medical teachers from their college their medical seats will also get derecognised automatically. Relieving doctors from one college so that they can be shown working in another college just for getting the recognition is in violation of MCI rules."
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Dr Sita Naik, member of MCI's governing body, said, "If a college has more teachers than the minimum number required, they can send some of their teaching staff to new medical colleges. Every college should have adequate teaching faculty to earn MCI recognition.
When our assessment team goes for an inspection, they mark the presence of all the medical teachers who are physically present and only then does the college get recognised."