Samaja ad for Sikshya Sahayaka positions in Odisha
11 comments January 5th, 2010
Following are excerpts from a report in http://www.hindu.com/2010/01/03/stories/2010010360571100.htm that points out some schemes taken up by some of the states in India.
On the same theme, recently there were reports about a new program proposed by the health ministry and the medical council of India called `Bachelor of Rural Medicine and Surgery’ (BRMS). Following is an excerpt from a report in Times of India about this.
Under the scheme, the undergraduate `Bachelor of Rural Medicine and Surgery’ (BRMS) degree would be acquired in two phases and at two different levels — Community Health Facility (one-and-a-half year duration) and sub-divisional hospitals (secondary level hospitals) for a further duration of two years.
The BRMS degree would be offered by institutes in rural areas with an annual sanctioned strength of 50 students. "Selection of students would be based on merit in the 10+2 examination with physics, chemistry and biology as subjects. A student who has had his entire schooling in a rural area with a population not more than 10,000 would be eligible for selection, which would be done by professional bodies set up by the Directorate of Medical Education of the state governments," the scheme noted.
This was further discussed in an opinion piece in TOI. Following is an excerpt.
The current proposal seeks to churn out general practitioners for rural India. Hence the move to reduce the duration of the degree course from five and a half to three and a half years. This, in a way, seems to be a revival of the Licentiate Medical Practitioners (LMP) scheme that prevailed before independence whereby students were trained as medical doctors for around three years, awarded a diploma and then fulfilled the needs of rural healthcare as a way to bridge the gap between demand and supply of licensed medical practitioners outside metropolitan India. LMPs, in fact, outnumbered MBBS graduates and they were largely serving in the rural areas.
In the US they have Nurse Practitioners who can substitute doctors for many tasks. See this Boston Globe article about Nurse Practitioners (NP) and also this site about where nurse practitioner programs are offered.
6 comments January 5th, 2010
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