Articles features
Now 'ghost' teachers haunt medical colleges!
By
Jaideep SarinChandigarh, March 22
Medical science may not
believe in the ghost stories but unethical practices adopted by private
medical colleges and unscrupulous doctors in the region have put a big
question mark on the standard of education being imparted and the kind
of doctors being churned out by these institutions.
With 436
'ghost' teachers being discovered by the Punjab Medical Council (PMC)
during its recent inspection of four private medical colleges in Punjab,
Haryana and Himachal Pradesh, a major controversy has erupted about the
unethical practices adopted by these colleges and doctors.
The
PMC team found that the 436 doctors, most of whom were practising in
Punjab, were simultaneously serving four medical colleges: MM (Maharishi
Markandeshwar) Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, Mullana
(Ambala-Haryana/240 doctors); MM Medical College and Hospital,
Kumarhatti (Himachal Pradesh/84 doctors), Gian Sagar Medical College and
Hospital, Banur (Punjab/64 doctors) and Adesh Institute of Medical
Sciences, Bathinda (Punjab/48 doctors).
The doctors were shown on
records of these institutions as faculty members on well-paid jobs even
without taking any classes. The PMC inspection revealed that one of the
doctors who was heading an institution's own ethics committee figured
in the list of ghost teachers.
Medical Council of India (MCI)
guidelines clearly stipulate that part-time and guest faculty cannot be
engaged for regular classes in medical colleges.
Faced with this embarrassing revelation, the PMC has initiated the process to suspend or cancel the registration of the doctors.
"We
are issuing show-cause notices to the concerned doctors. Action will
follow, based on their replies. If they are actually teaching in these
institutes in other states, they will have to be de-listed from the
PMC," PMC president G.S. Grewal told IANS.
The PMC has received
complaints that the doctors who were shown as faculty members in
colleges in three states were running their private health clinics, hair
therapy clinics, cosmetic therapy clinics and even offering treatment
for heart ailments.
The department of medical education and research in Punjab has initiated an investigation into the findings of the PMC team.
"There
is a tendency among some medical colleges, which are mere teaching
shops, to show doctors as their regular faculty whereas these people may
have never even visited these institutions. Everyone is making a fast
buck in all this mess. The kind of doctors that these medical colleges
produce is anyone's guess," a senior faculty member at Patiala's
Government Medical College told IANS.
Students pay hefty amounts, running in lakhs of rupees, to get admission to these medical colleges.
(Jaideep Sarin can be contacted at [email protected])