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Medical Council of India lets down disabled medical aspirants yet again

Posted in General

The much-awaited Medical Council of India (MCI) guidelines
regarding eligibility of disabled candidates wishing to pursue an MBBS degree
are finally out.

Not only do they come two weeks after the closure of the correction window
for disabled students taking the entrance exam, they totally disregard the
amendments put forward by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare
(MoHFW)

as well as the provisions of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Act, 2016 (RPWD)
. While the amendments relating to students with low
vision and hearing impairments find reflection, the guidelines bar people
with over 80% locomotor disabilities, saying they will be “ineligible’ to
pursue an MBBS degree.

This is blatantly against the MoHFW’s amendment which stated –
Persons with more than 80% disability may also be allowed; but after their
selection, their functional competency will be determined with the aid of
assistive devices”
.

This was also approved of by the MCI Board of Governors in their third
meeting
on 18 October 2018, where it was decided that a communication
to this effect would be sent to the MoHFW and the National Testing
Agency
that conducts the entrance exam.

The guidelines say low vision and hearing-impaired students can pursue MBBS
with the aid of assistive devices, but the guidelines relating to locomotor
disabilities is deeply disappointing. It is strange that the MCI has gone
against the Ministry’s own guidelines, which were put forward after the
Supreme Court orders. – Dr Satendra Singh, Doctors with
Disabilities

According to sources, this has been brought to the Ministry’s notice, which
may consider adding a corrigendum that students with locomotor
disabilities can study MBBS with assistive devices. “This move is an insult
to the pioneering work of Dr Mary Varghese, a wheelchair user, who
established India’s first PMR Department and Dr. Suresh Advani, a
haemato-oncologist and wheelchair user, whom the President of India awarded
the Padma Vibhushan and even the MCI awarded B C Roy award”, points out Dr
Singh.

Also glaring is the omission of dysgraphia from the list
although it is listed as a specified disability under the RPWD Act.

NewzHook made repeated attempts to reach members of the MCI
Council, but the calls and messages went unacknowledged.

Doctors with Disabilities, which has been fighting the
discriminatory guidelines, says the MCI’s apathy towards the issue is
evident from the fact that it did not involve doctors or people with
disabilities while framing these guidelines, despite repeated petitions.

This is even after the previous MCI guidelines were challenged at various
courts across India and ruled as discriminatory. Despite that the same set of
experts were given the task of compiling the new set of guidelines.

For parents of prospective students, this means another long spell of
uncertainty and tension. RB, parent to a disabled aspirant
says he has not slept properly for months.

“Why would the MCI be so unfair to come out with these guidelines after the
court orders”, he asks. “The very fact that disabled students who were
ruled as ineligible earlier are now successfully studying MBBS shows they are
capable. This is just an excuse to exclude disabled people on some
pretext.”

What makes this even more bizarre is that the post graduate prospectus of the
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, which is a
government institution does not mention such unfair guidelines. “How can
two government institutions have such different points of view?”, asks RB.

Ironically, a senior Health Ministry official was part of a focused group
discussion on disability inclusive compassionate care just last week.
Clearly, that message seems to have escaped many.

Source: https://newzhook.com/story/21375

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