IN 2012, I wrote THIS. The article was about the reduction of compulsory service for Dentist from 3 years to 2 years. Since 2001 , it was 3 years compulsory service. It was mentioned that there were 400% increase in the number of dental graduates since 2002 (when the compulsory service was increased from 2 years to 3 years). While the actual numbers are still small, it was good enough to fill up the total number of post in civil service. However, I still feel that the private sector still needs a lot of dentist. The fact remains that many Malaysians are not bothered about dental hygiene.
Now, barely 3 years later, it is now being reduced to 1 year !. It was announced by the Minister of Health on 14/06/2015. The reason: tremendous increase in the number of graduates !. Sounds familiar ? The only reason why the same is not being done for doctors is because the MMC is reluctant to do it. If it does happen, we will be seeing countless number of incompetent doctors having ” license to kill” out there. I feel the time will come for MMC to reduce the compulsory service. BUT I would prefer if they can introduce an entry or exit exam to filter out the incompetent ones rather that reducing the compulsory service.
Definitely, we do not want to end up like what is happening in India, as published by Reuters over HERE (see below). Again, much of what is written in that article may sound very familiar! Medical Education should never be commercialised!
So, when will be our doctor’s turn to have ” license to kill”?
Selamat Menyambut Bulan Ramadhan
Only one-year mandatory service
KUALA LUMPUR: The compulsory service for all dentistry graduates will be reduced from two years to one year effective July, said Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr S. Subramaniam.
He said graduates who had registered with the Malaysian Dental Council would be placed under the ministry to undergo possible training.
The move, he said, was due to the tremendous increase in the number of graduates of up to 30%, as well as to ensure that new graduates would continue to serve under the ministry.
“In the one-year compulsory service, we will give them adequate training so that they have the knowledge and skills to be competent dentists.
“For those who served their compulsory one year, they may join the private sector or if they wish to continue training elsewhere or do postgraduate studies, they may do so,” he told a press conference after launching the Malaysian International Dental Exhibition and Conference (Midec) here yesterday.
Also present were the ministry’s Oral Health Division principal director Datuk Dr Khairiyah Abdul Muttalib and Midec organising chairman Dr Shalini Kanagasingam.
Why India’s medical schools are plagued with fraud
Reuters
The Reuters probe also found that recruiting companies routinely provide medical colleges with doctors to pose as full-time faculty members to pass government inspections.
MUZAFFARNAGAR (India), June 16, 2015:
Last December, Dilshad Chaudhry travelled with about 100 of his fellow villagers by bus to a local Indian medical-school hospital. They’d been told that foreign doctors were coming to tour the facility, and check-ups would be free.
There was nothing wrong with Chaudhry; he was accompanying his brother, who had a back problem. But “every person was told to lie in a bed even if they’re not sick,” he said.
The 20-year-old electrician said he never saw any foreign physicians that day, but the hospital’s Indian doctors kept checking that the phony patients were in bed. “They wanted to make sure no one escaped,” he said.
That was the same month government inspectors visited the hospital, which is at Muzaffarnagar Medical College, 80 miles northeast of New Delhi. The inspectors checked, among other things, whether there were enough patients to provide students with adequate clinical experience. They determined there were.
But a year earlier, inspectors had found that most of the college hospital’s outpatients “were fake and dummy and seems to be hired from nearby slum area”, according to the official report.
“In paediatric ward all children were admitted … without any medical problem and were hired from nearby area!!!!!”
“I am not very keen to reply,” said Dr Anil Agarwal, the school’s principal, when asked about the episode with Chaudhry.
India’s system for training doctors is broken. It is plagued by rampant fraud and unprofessional teaching practices, exacerbating the public health challenge facing this fast-growing but still poor nation of about 1.25 billion people.
The ramifications spread beyond the country’s borders: India is the world’s largest exporter of doctors, with about 47,000 currently practicing in the United States and about 25,000 in the United Kingdom.
Schools and scandals
In a four-month investigation, Reuters has documented the full extent of the fraud in India’s medical-education system. It found, among other things, that more than one out of every six of the country’s 398 medical schools has been accused of cheating, according to Indian government records and court filings.
The Reuters probe also found that recruiting companies routinely provide medical colleges with doctors to pose as full-time faculty members to pass government inspections.
To demonstrate that teaching hospitals have enough patients to provide students with clinical experience, colleges round up healthy people to pretend they are sick.
Government records show that since 2010, at least 69 Indian medical colleges and teaching hospitals have been accused of such transgressions or other significant failings, including rigging entrance exams or accepting bribes to admit students.
Two dozen of the schools have been recommended for outright closure by the regulator.
Paying bribes — often in the guise of “donations” — to gain admission to Indian medical schools is widespread, according to India’s health ministry, doctors and college officials.
“The next generation of doctors is being taught to cheat and deceive before they even enter the classroom,” said Dr. Anand Rai.
He exposed a massive cheating ring involving medical school entrance exams in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh in 2013. Rai was given police protection after he received death threats following the bust.
The poor state of India’s medical education reflects a health system in crisis. The country has the highest rates of mortality from diarrhea, pneumonia and tuberculosis, creating pressure to train more physicians.
Patients are regularly denied treatment at public hospitals that are so overcrowded, often the only way to see a doctor is to pay a bribe.
The causes of the crisis are manifold: Too few doctors. A government-backed surge in private medical schools which, to boost revenue, frequently charge under-the-table fees for admission.
Outdated government regulations that, for example, require college libraries to keep paper copies of medical journals and penalize those that subscribe instead to online editions.
Charged with maintaining “excellence in medical education” is the Medical Council of India(MCI). But this government body is itself mired in controversy. Its prior president currently faces bribery allegations.
The council is the subject of a mountain of lawsuits, many of them pitting it against medical schools challenging its findings. The cases often drag on for years.
“The best medical schools in India are absolutely world class,” said David Gordon, president of the World Federation for Medical Education.
But, he added, the Indian government’s process of accrediting a “huge” number of recently opened, private medical schools “has at times been highly dubious”.
India has been rocked by a series of recent medical scandals, including doctors accused of serious crimes.
In November, a group of junior doctors at a medical college in the eastern city of Kolkata allegedly tied a suspected mobile phone thief to a pillar, slashed him with a razor and beat him to death with bamboo sticks, according to local police.
Nine of the accused men remain in jail; they deny murder charges, say lawyers involved in the case. Three suspects remain at large.
The scalpel thrower
The system’s problems are felt abroad, too. Tens of thousands of India’s medical graduates practice overseas, particularly in the United States, Britain, Australia and Canada.
All of these countries require additional training before graduates of Indian medical schools can practice, and the vast majority of the doctors have unblemished records.
But regulatory documents show that in both Britain and Australia, more graduates of Indian medical schools lost their right to practice medicine in the past five years than did doctors from any other foreign country.
In the United Kingdom, between 2008 and 2014, Indian-trained doctors were four times more likely to lose their right to practice than British-trained doctors, according to records of Britain’s General Medical Council. (The U.S. and Canada lack publicly available centralized databases of disciplined doctors.)
The British cases include that of Dr Tajeshwar Singh Aulakh, who received his medical degree in 1999 from Punjabi University in Patiala, India, according to Indian government records.
He was assisting during a hip operation in 2008 in Shropshire, England, when he allegedly grabbed a scalpel, slashed the patient’s stitches and threw it toward a nurse, according to British government records. The United Kingdom later struck him off its list of approved physicians. He could not be reached for comment.
The Australian cases include that of Dr Suhail Durani, who graduated from an Indian government medical college in the northern city of Jammu in 2003. He was imprisoned in Perth for more than 18 months after being convicted in 2011 of sexually assaulting a female diabetic patient who had shown up in the emergency room with symptoms of a potentially serious illness.
In an interview, Durani maintained his innocence and described his medical training in Indiaas excellent. He currently is not practicing medicine.
Dr Ramesh Mehta, vice president of the Global Association of Physicians of Indian Origin, said there are “major problems” with some private Indian medical schools. But he added that a doctor’s success depends as much on “personality and attitude” as on his or her college training.
Fake degrees
About 45% of the people in India who practice medicine have no formal training, according to the Indian Medical Association. These 700,000 unqualified doctors have been found practicing at some of India’s biggest hospitals, giving diagnoses, prescribing medicines and even conducting surgery.
Balwant Rai Arora, a Delhi resident in his 90s, said in an interview that he issued more than 50,000 fake medical degrees from his home until his forgery ring was broken up by the police in 2011. Each buyer paid about US$100 (RM375) for a degree from fictitious colleges. Arora was twice convicted and jailed for forgery.
“There is a shortage of doctors in India. I am just helping people with some medical experience get jobs,” said Arora. “I haven’t done anything wrong.”
India currently has about 840,000 doctors — or about seven physicians for every 10,000 people. That compares with about 25 in the United States and 32 in Europe, according to the World Health Organization.
The shortfall has persisted despite India having the most medical schools of any nation. That’s because the size of graduating classes is small — typically 100 to 150 students.
Indeed, gaining admission to India’s top medical schools is akin to winning the lottery. The All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi has been rated the best medical school in India Today magazine’s past five annual surveys.
According to the registrar’s office, it takes in only 72 students for its undergraduate course each year out of about 80,000 to 90,000 who apply — an acceptance rate of less than one-tenth of 1%. As in theUnited Kingdom, most medical school students attend an undergraduate programme.
Similarly, Christian Medical College, a top-ranked school in the southern city of Vellore, received 39,974 applications this year for 100 places, according to a school official — an acceptance rate of 0.25%. By contrast, the acceptance rate at Harvard Medical School for its entering class in 2014 was 3.5%.
Health ministry officials and doctors say India’s medical-education system began to falter following a surge in new, private medical colleges that opened across the country during the past few decades, often in remote areas.
In 1980, there were 100 government-run medical schools and 11 private medical colleges. Thirty-five years later, the number of government medical colleges has nearly doubled.
The number of private medical schools, meanwhile, has risen nearly twenty-fold, according to the Medical Council of India. There are now 183 government medical colleges and 215 private ones.
‘Little better than quacks’
Many of the private colleges have been set up by businessmen and politicians who have no experience operating medical or educational institutions, said MCI officials.
Sujatha Rao, who served as India’s health secretary from 2009 to 2010, said the boom in private colleges was driven by a change in the law in the early 1990s to make it easier to open new schools because the government was struggling to find the money to build public medical schools.
“The market has been flooded with doctors so poorly trained they are little better than quacks,” Rao told Reuters.
Not that a legitimate degree necessarily makes a difference.
A study in India published in 2012 compared doctors holding medical degrees with untrained practitioners. It found “no differences in the likelihood of providers’ giving a diagnosis or providing the correct treatment”.
The study, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, concluded that in India, “training in and of itself is not a guarantor of high quality”.
Last year, an individual described as a “concerned” student at a rural government medical college in Ambajogai, in western India, posted a letter online with a litany of allegations about the school, Swami Ramanand Teerth Rural Medical College.
There were professors who existed only on paper, he alleged, and “no clinics and no lectures” for students in the medicine and surgery departments. Conditions were unsanitary at the hospital, and pigs and donkeys roamed the campus, he wrote. The writer also alleged that students had to pay bribes to pass exams.
“We are not taught in this medical college,” the letter stated. Students have graduated “without even attending a single day”. The writer said the letter had been sent to various government agencies and health officials.
Records from the Medical Council of India, the body charged with maintaining the country’s medical education standards, show that an inspection of the college this January found numerous deficiencies, including a shortage of faculty, residents and lecture theaters.
Dr Nareshkumar S. Dhaniwala, who served as the principal of the college between 2011 and 2013, said “there is some truth in the letter”.
Animals, such as pigs and cows, do roam the campus, teachers and students don’t turn up for lessons, and there is a scarcity of running water in the dormitories, he said. And before he joined, he said, he heard students had to pay to pass final exams.
“I found the students were not very interested in studying, they don’t come to classes, they don’t come to clinics,” Dhaniwala said.
“Medical education has gone downhill all over the country because the teachers are not as devoted as they used to be.”
Sudhir Deshmukh, the college’s current principal, did not respond to requests for comment.
The Medical Council of India, which was established by the government in 1934 and oversees medical education, has itself been swirling in controversy.
Dr Ketan Desai, the council’s former president, faces criminal charges related to his arrest in 2010 for allegedly conspiring to receive a bribe to recommend authorizing a private medical college to accept more students. The case is still pending; Desai has denied the charges.
‘Junk body’
In interviews, medical school officials complained that the MCI had onerous inspection requirements that were outdated and arbitrary.
“The Medical Council of India is a junk body,” said Dr A. K. Asthana, principal and dean of Subharti Medical College in the northern city of Meerut, which has been accused of demanding illegal fees for admission. Asthana denies the allegations.
The council has tried — unsuccessfully so far — to close the school. “I’m totally frustrated with the MCI. Totally frustrated,” he said.
Dr Vedprakash Mishra, the head of MCI’s academic committee, told Reuters that the agency has created “discipline and accountability” among medical colleges by imposing fines and, in several cases, prohibiting schools from admitting students for up to two years.
“We don’t compromise and mitigate on the requirements,” he said.
Asked about allegations of corruption within MCI itself, Mishra abruptly ended the interview. “This is not what I want to be discussing,” he said.
Under the government’s current regulations, private medical colleges generally must have campuses on at least 20 acres of land. Because urban real estate in India is expensive, many schools open in rural areas where recruiting qualified, full-time doctors to teach is difficult because pay scales are low and living conditions are tough.
Interviews and MCI records show that some private colleges solve the problem by cheating — they recruit doctors to pose as full-time faculty members during government inspections. The physicians work there for just a few days or weeks.
Two MCI officials estimated that there are several hundred Indian companies involved in recruiting them.
In October, a doctor in New Delhi received an email from a local company called Hi Impact Consultants with the subject line: “Urgent requirement of doctors for MCI Inspection in Ghaziabad”
The email offered up to 20,000 rupees a day (about RM1,163)) if the doctor appeared for an inspection at Saraswathi Institute of Medical Sciences in Hapur, east of New Delhi. The doctor, who requested anonymity, has no connection with the college.
“If interested please revert back ASAP,” the email concluded. The sender described itself as “a Medical Executive Search firm”.
In an interview, Sanjeev Priyadershi, Hi Impact’s executive director, confirmed that the firm had tried to recruit doctors to appear during government inspections at medical colleges where they don’t normally work.
“My client wanted to hire full-time faculty members for inspection purposes,” he said.
Dr Shailendra K. Vajpeyee, the principal of Saraswathi, said the college is constantly struggling to recruit qualified professors. Vajpeyee said he knew of Hi Impact Consultants, but denied he had employed them during his 18-month tenure.
“I don’t know why that email was sent” by the company, he said. He declined to comment further about the matter.
‘Biased inspectors’
At Muzaffarnagar Medical College, where electrician Dilshad Chaudhry was taken in December, students can read medical journals and books in a sprawling, circular library and take classes in clean and modern lecture halls.
But finding enough patients to provide students with clinical experience at rural, private teaching hospitals like Muzaffarnagar is a challenge. Many people in rural India simply can’t afford the cost of treatment.
School principal Agarwal denied the allegations by MCI inspectors that the college’s hospital had inflated its number of patients during a 2013 inspection.
“Sometimes the inspectors are biased, that is for sure,” he said. He also denied the hospital had ever recruited local villagers to pose as patients.
But Dr Vaibhav Jain, a former student at the college, told Reuters that the hospital would conduct “free check-up camps”, to lure rural villagers to the facility on inspection days.
He said the hospital sometimes would promise free ultrasounds, but only a small number of people would be tested. Villagers often later complained about it to students at a clinic in Bilaspur where he worked, he said.
“We used to say we can’t do anything, the machine was not working,” he said.
Medical education is in trouble across India, said Jain. “The truth is that many medical students aren’t prepared to be doctors when they finish” college.
“And the result is the patient suffers.”
CMC only takes 100 and AIIMS (not AIMST) takes only 72 students per year. Wow. Now that is how you maintain quality.
They made the same mistake as Msia. Good med schools should increase intake, not the poor quality private colleges. The MoE’s decision to reduce intake into IPTA to “accommodate” the increase in IPTS output likewise, is a step in the wrong direction.
But it appears nobody cares. Money matters.
money money money!
With regards to the common licensing exam, it would be unlikely for them to conduct it within 3 years. They simply lack the political will to do so. I lament on how our politicians have become some sort of populist. As what Lee Kuan Yew said, do something right, not politically right !
I would love to see the way they deal with the increase in medical graduates without any substantial increase in housemanship job. The waiting list is just going to get longer and I worry some of our good and passionate medical graduates cannot get into it.
The HO waiting time will get longer , probably reaching 1 year by 2017. Since HO job is a rolling post, most will end up with a post eventually. However, MO post is a permanent post which means, once full, no more can be taken in. The government would not be able to increase 6000 post every year to cater for the doctors finishing HO. That’s why I feel either they will shorten the compulsory service, hoping many will leave the service or introduce an exit exam.
it’s very likely that doctors shall be the next, not sure what is the update regarding this issue. I wonder what is the proportion of scholarship owners among the medical graduates. if scholarship holders (JPA, MARA , Yayasan etc ) are prioritized by MOH, those from private college with PTPTN or FAMA loan are in deep trouble. However those terrible one with government bond, will they be removed from MOH if they were found to be incompetent ?
The bonded ones will definitely be given priority for MO job.
attention seeker to find more readers. find different subjects to write and see if u still got any reader. get a life old man
Haha, who is asking you to read my blog! I don’t get anything by seeking attention!
Bro , you should thank Dr Paga for spending so much time on writing these insightful articles despite his busy schedule!
Well, it’s better to be an old man rather than stupid like you. Grow up, Ms.Pony Tails.
u must be one of the incompetent private med grad who entered med school with ur parents hard earned money…
Hi Doctor,
I’d like to seek your honest advice with regards to pursuing medicine.
I’m a Malaysian who has completed my pri,sec and jc education in Singapore.
I would like to very much pursue medicine.
I have been offered a place at NuMed and have been brooding over whether i should accept the offer or not. Having chanced upon your blog and read many of the articles here, I am starting to have doubts about pursuing medicine in Malaysia given the possibly long wait for housemanship and seemingly bleak prospects for of being a future doctor in Malaysia.
However, I very much want my future career to be in the healthcare sector, and if possible, that of a doctor.
As such I am seeking your advice as to whether I should go ahead and study Medicine in NuMed, or perhaps opt for an alternative path such as study Nursing in NUS (I have already been accepted) and then try to get into Duke-NUS (which of course will not be easy)?
Have been brooding over this matter for 5+ weeks and need to get back to NuMed in 3 days. Would really appreciate your advice very much.
Thank you!
It depends on where you want to work in the future. You studied all the way in Singapore which means you will not be familiar with Malaysian style of education and people. Some who did that can’t even speak Bahasa. Under current rule, if you do not have Bahasa SPM, you will not get a job in MOH Malaysia. Secondly, NuMed is not recognised in Singapore as far as I know or anywhere else except UK. However, chances of getting an internship post in UK for a foreigner is almost NIL.
So, if you are planning to work only in Malaysia, then you can take NuMed and sit for BM SPM paper along the way. Of course, by the time you graduate, there will be abundant number of doctors waiting for housemanship. Waiting period will be longer and prospect may not be that good. BUT that is part and parcel of life. At the end of the day, it is entirely up to you.
If there is any intention of working in Singapore in the future, and I think that is likely on account of you earlier education, I would suggest getting a degree that is recognised in Singapore. Which means basically, either go to UK or Australia (note that not all Unis are recognised), or go do the IMU-PMS programme and make sure you match to a SMC recognised uni after.
Doing it in NuMed will mean being barred from Singapore, until you have a recognised postgraduate, which then allows you provisional registration as a Medical Officer.
Practising medicine in Malaysia in the immediate future is fraught with uncertainties, and likely to be a very bumpy career path.
I suppose with the uncertain future of medical practice in Malaysia, one can only assume that all privately funded current and future Malaysian medical students in Oz and UK medical schools will not be returning. Sad reality.
yup, but the situation in those countries are not great either.
so this is a GLOBAL phenomenon. Malaysia is just trying to catch up with the other big international players…please dont blame Bolehland for everything.
BUT the situation in Bolehland is the worst! IN other countries, they still have enough post for their own graduates. Only foreign students graduating in these countries may not get a job. IN Bolehland, their own graduates may not get a job.
Dear twml,
Please stay in Singapore and do a internationally recognised degree, no point ending up being looked down by your singapore counterpart having a cheapskate medicine degree from somewhere no one in Singapore knows.
Hi Doctor..
I need your opinion..
Igot an offer from mara…doing medic at rcmp but its not full scholarship…i need to pay back 25% of the expenses
And im currently at uitm doing asasi sains hoping to get a place to medic in uitm..
So what should i choose?
If i choose rcmp..i need to pay back 25% but its almost guaranteed to do medic
Or
Stay in asasi where i still need to compete with others to get medic and take jpa scholar
Help me please………
How can RCMP guarantee you a seat? It should still based on your Pre-U course.
I always cringe when people talk like this, as if a place is already guaranteed. Because in reality, most of the time, it is! Which is an indictment of the dismal state of medical education in Malaysia. Compete with other Asasi students to get into UiTM considered “difficult”? In other parts of the world students compete with the WHOLE country’s youths, and ONLY the best are selected.
If you feel competition at Asasi level it too tough, maybe you are not doctor material? And any pathway and med school offering “almost guaranteed” entry not worth it?
Or maybe the hell with quality and excellence.
why always spreading negative thinking to our next generation? #pakyou
Because the truth hurts!People always do not want to know the truth and regret later!
Agree with you, jkl. I disdain people who can’t even bear the academic challenge to do a proper A level or STPM and choose the easy way out to do the “despicable” matriculation or foundation course. Simply tarnishing the socially perceived image and reputation of a doctor.
[…] after some news reports, our DG issued a press statement on the situation of dental graduates. In June 2015, I did write about the situation of dental graduates when the government decided to reduce the […]