The Committee, which presented its report in Rajya Sabha today, said the elected MCI neither represents "professional excellence nor its ethos", and that more than half of the members are either from corporate hospitals or in private practice.
"The Committee is surprised to note that even doctors nominated under Section 3(1)(a) and 3(1)(e) to represent state governments and Central government have been nominated from corporate private hospitals which are not only highly commercialised and provide care at exorbitant cost but have also been found to be violating value frameworks," the report said.
"The Committee is of the considered view that the composition of the MCI is opaque and skewed and diversity needs to be brought into this because having only medical doctors in the Council is not an enabling factor for ensuring reforms in medical education and practice," said the Committee as it recommended opening Council membership to diverse stakeholders such as public health experts, health economists, health NGOs, patient advocacy groups, etc.
Also Read
"It is public knowlegde that the majority of seats in private medical colleges are allotted for a capitation fee going upto Rs 50 Lakh and even more in some colleges despite the fact that the capitation is not legal.
The Committee also said the existing minimum standard
"The Committee, therefore, recommends that physical infrastructure requirement be pruned down in such a way that it should have just about 30-40 per cent standing value in the total assessment of a medical college," the report said.
The Committee also recommended complete restructuring of the undergraduate education and suggested that the PG entrance exam should be held immediately after the final MBBS examination so that graduate doctors could concentrate on practical skills during internship.
"The Committee also observes that the medical education in India is increasingly depersonalised and has failed to instill human values of care, concern, courtesy and compassion.
The Committee also recommended that the current system of PG medical education be restructured taking the best of both systems that is all Indian common entrance exam for all seats and common exit evaluation for all candidates as practised by DNB (Diplomate of National Board) and the training and evaluation processes of the university based system into one national qualification.