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HC vacates interim order

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Press Trust of India Chennai
Last Updated : Nov 12 2016 | 11:32 PM IST
The Madras High Court has vacated an interim order granted in 2006 restraining state and central authorities from enforcing penal provisions of the Indian Medical Council Act and the Drugs and Cosmetics Act against unqualified medical practitioners.
Dismissing a plea filed by Private Medical Practitioners Association of India, the court, in a recent order, said "Persons claiming to have practical experience in modern scientific system of medicine ganged up to form an association and have filed this petition."
"When the petition came up for admission on April 6, 2006, a single judge of this court granted interim injunction as prayed for and thereafter, the case never saw the light of the day, until it was resurrected from the labyrinth of the record room, thanks to the orders of the Chief Justice and posted for disposal before this court as a 'specially ordered matter' this year," the court said.
In its plea, the association had sought a direction to restrain police from taking any criminal action against them and harassing them from practising.
The association submitted that its members had rich experience in curing diseases and some of them also did have the requisite qualification in alternative system of medicine and therefore, the police could not prosecute them.
The court had granted interim injunction and restrained authorities from enforcing the penal provisions of the Indian Medical Council Act and Drugs and Cosmetics Act in the case of unqualified medical practitioners.

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Vacating the interim order, the court said: "during this period of ten years, members of this association and certain others successfully thwarted all attempts by police to check their illegal practice of modern medicine by taking umbrage under the order of interim injunction."
The court said in Tamil Nadu, medical degrees for Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Sidha and Homeopathy are given by the Tamil Nadu Dr MGR Medical University. "After obtaining the degree, the intending practitioner should enroll himself in the state register maintained for each of the systems of medicine before commencing his practice."
"Similarly, when those qualified in a particular stream
of medicine encroaches into a different domain and prescribes medicines not relating to their domain, the state's intervention becomes imperative," the court said.
For instance, when an Ayurveda practitioner prescribes Allopathic medicines, it said, the question that arises is whether he has violated the provisions of the Indian Medical Council Act.
Stating that two government orders that were passed in 1966 and 1972 permitting such practitioners had been withdrawn by the Centre in October 1982, the court said, the central order directed the state governments to crack down on unqualified medical practitioners.

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First Published: Nov 12 2016 | 11:32 PM IST

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