HomeNewsEconomyPolicyPrivate hospitals seek financial aid from government to train more specialists

Private hospitals seek financial aid from government to train more specialists

The number of post-graduate degree and diploma seats in medicine in the country has risen by 78 percent over the past five years. Yet, there is a shortfall of specialist doctors beyond the tier-1 cities.

July 20, 2022 / 13:36 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

Hospitals across India want financial support to train and pay specialist doctors as the government pushes for more such health professionals to help overcome a shortfall of such personnel, especially in small towns and rural areas.

There are currently about 10,000 Diplomate of National Board (DNB) seats in India, which are equivalent to post-graduate degrees in medicine (MS and MD). The Centre wants to increase this number to 20,000.

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The Association of National Board Accredited Institutions, a network of hospitals offering DNB degrees, recently wrote to Dr V K Paul, member (health) at Niti Aayog, saying the government should subsidise the stipend that hospitals need to pay DNB residents.

“This, as you are aware, is the main cause for hospitals limiting the number of seats and will go a long way in smaller hospitals also starting new courses and increasing the number of students and subsequently specialists,” ANBAI founder-member Alexander Thomas said in the letter, referring to the financial burden of hospitals.