Medical society opposes curriculum change by Govt Friday, September 23 2005 18:09 Hrs (IST) - World Time -
New Delhi:
Government today (Sept 23, 2005) said expert medical bodies would be involved in designing the new medical curriculum to integrate modern system with Indian Systems of Medicine (ISM), but the medical fraternity criticised the integration proposal saying it would 'promote quackery'.
Changes would be made by a committee comprising experts, including Medical Council of India and Dental Council experts and vice chancellors. The entire process would take about two years, Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss told reporters.
He said the move was in line with the country's Health Policy, which suggests integration of ISM with modern medicine.
But the Indian Medical Association said integration means providing health care involving all the systems of medicine at health-care centres. It does not mean making one individual expert of all systems of medicine.
Rather than toying with the current curriculum, which had led to India producing world-class doctors, Government should create posts of ISM doctors in primary health centres, Vinay Agarwal, IMA's Secretary General said.
ISM doctors should also be employed in big hospitals and a board involving experts from all systems could be set up in them to decide treatment strategy for chronic patients, he
said.
"The idea of adding ayurveda, unani and homoeopathy subjects in the already over-crowded medical curriculum is not going to help anybody," Agarwal said.
"The move would also lead to an increase in quackery," he said adding it will not only 'dilute' the standards of medical education but also 'weaken' ISM because these systems will become subsidiaries to the main allopathic system.