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Sep30

While ordering for " NEET " for UG and PG examination,Supreme Court clearly opined that in name of Medical or any other Education a Business or Industry cant be allowed as persisting in India an Industry of Thousand Crores being run by Top Politicians,industralist,Retired Bureaucrats and Even Judges manipulating and Bribing Regulator like MCI,Police,Health and General administrator, funding our leaders donating political parties or bringing Law in favour from a SC Judge like Mr.Kabir .            With the coming of NEET, the indirect Income of Crores as bribe by admitting students for PG and UG taking 1crore for UG and 4 crore for PG and 2-10 crores for NRI seats conducting all manipulated entrance examinations is no more present so now the fee of Medical colleges has been hiked to a label which most poor and middle class students cant afford so many seats will be left out and after 2nd counselling they will sell it for 5-10 crores as their stategy.First in name of Deemed Universities ,most of which are nothing but an industry to earn crores in name of Education by bring HRD Ministry and Bureaucrats,secondly by arranging counselling themselves,and third by offering seats to students of other states rather than  to students of the state only where Medical college present .Thus  PVT Medical Colleges are utilising all method to earn ,that is why so many medical colleges are being opened as in this business only after initial investment for few crores annual income of 300 crores is gurantted.    According to a TOI conducted survey, following are the costs incurred for a medical education in various states of India: The state of Tamil Nadu emerges as one of the most expensive grantor for medical study, with its annual fee ranging between Rs 16.8 lac and Rs 21.9 lac. Gujarat is the cheapest, with medical fee costs ranging between 12 lac and 9 lac. This year has witnessed a further hike in medical fee at private medical colleges. The justification given by these colleges for the hike being stringent Medical Council of India (MCI), norms for hospitals and infrastructure.Even Tainted MCI and Government in form of Nation Medical Commission also seconds their proposal saying those who can afford should buy the seat. Government colleges have however, maintained a steady sum for fee.Tamil Nadu in this case, once again leading all other states in the hike race. Chennai-based SRM Medical College, that was earlier charging a tuition fee of Rs 10 lac per year in 2015- has raised it to Rs.21 lac. The private Katihar Medical College, Bihar, has seen an annual revision of the tuition fee from Rs 8 lac last year to Rs.12.5 lac this year. Delhi has also witnessed a marginal rise; Hamdard Institute of Medical Science ,a private college in the capital has raised its annual fee for management quota from Rs.15 lac in 2015 to Rs.18 lac this year. Though all private colleges come under the purview of the Supreme Court-appointed fee committees in each state, deemed universities are exempted of all such authority. Chennai-based Saveetha University , deemed in nature, has seen its annual tuition fee go up from Rs. 9 lac last year to Rs. 15 lac this year. In Government colleges however, the cost of medical education is a fraction of these sums ranging from as little as Rs. 9,000 in Rajasthan to Rs. 4.4 lac in Punjab. Private universities quoting overheads to being high state MCI stipulations for hospitals and college infrastructure as being stringent. ‘We need to woo faculty from clinical practice, which isn’t easy ,’ said a chancellor of a private university in Chennai. Speaking about the status of deemed universities, Dr. CV Bhirmanandam, member of the TN committee,described them as being ‘out of their purview.’ “According to the SC directive we allow them to fix tuition fee factoring in their income, expenses and extra money to improve services and scope for some profit,” he said. Skeptical activists state that despite hiking fee some colleges continue to take capitation fee. According to skeptics PAN number additions could help making the process fool proof. Parents are disillusioned for it is their wards who happen to be worst hit. Money means business for private institutions, but it marks the end of a dream for the meritorious. ‘My daughter has the score, but we don’t have the money,” said K Srinivasan, who was asked to pay Rs 40 lac at a varsity in Chennai.’       Therefor only hope is Supreme court which has prevented private counselling should fix fee for every college and NRI or no left out seats should be allowed to sell,should monitor good education by recording Digital online survey of medical colleges for Facilities,patients being operated and teachers appointed doing teaching and treatment rather then sending Inspectors as even now MCI is unable to catch poor facilities,Ghost faculty and Fake Patients in many medical colleges recognised recently even many old recognised PVT Medical Colleges and few  Government colleges donot have adequate teachers as recognised so they hardly bother to fulfill its shortcomings otherwisw now today MEDICAL EDUCATION IS UNAFFORDABLE TO MOST OF COMMON STUDENTS OF INDIA .



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