Expressing concern over the quality of medical education, the Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, has said a “credible regulatory” mechanism should be put in place and a “serious look” given at the curriculum.
“There is a perception of deteriorating quality. We cannot allow this situation to continue. We must put in place a credible regulatory and institutional mechanism to help develop standards in our medical education,” he said in his address at the third Convocation at Jawaharlal Institute of Post graduate Medical Education and Research here.
He said a serious look at the curriculum for medical education needs to be taken so that doctors are trained to look at health in a holistic manner that goes beyond a narrow clinical and technology-driven approach.
Observing that the country faces “serious challenges” in assuring the health and well-being of people, he said health indicators continue to be poor and high mortality rates of infants and pregnant women have been a cause for serious concern.
Despite decades of implementing health and family welfare programmes, the country is still faced with a situation where two thirds of health expenditure is borne by people from out of their pockets, with a large proportion of this expenditure on purchase of drugs, he said.
“Our Government has decided to continue the National Rural Health Mission for the next five years. We are now proposing a new National Urban Health Mission in order to focus on the health challenges in our towns and cities,” he said in the presence of the Union Health Minister, Mr Ghulam Nabi Azad, and others.