Chitwan, Dec 11: Minister for Health and Population Mohan Bahadur Basnet today said the government had initiated the process of amending the Medical Education Act.
Talking to media-persons here, he
said the amendment of the Act was being discussed at the Council of Ministers.
The existing provision in the Act has prevented the health education from
advancing as expected, he argued. "Prime Minister is ready about the
amendment. The Cabinet now will discuss the matter."
Mentioning that the meeting was
called two times to discuss the issue, he said the amendment process had been
carried forward. The existing Act could cause problems in the medical and
health technology in the next five years, prompting its amendment, he reasoned.
Quotas in the medical sector would be added as the sector is making do with the
quotas managed 22 years ago, he said.
"The state should not drag its
feet to do good things for the interest of the country just because a person
threatens to go on a hunger strike. We will go ahead by implementing positive
things in the Act and removing bad things."
The government would make a
procedure and carry out a monitoring relating to the quality of medical
education and fixing the fees, he said.
The current education policy would
be somehow flexible, he said.
The government was at work to be
some flexible about the medical education by allowing a health institute with
100 to 300 beds to conduct nursing and paramedic courses and a health facility
with more than 300 beds to run MBBS courses, he informed.
In another context, the minister
said preparations were underway to bring the tax system on tobacco products
under the Ministry of Health. The amounts raised from the tax would be used on
increasing quality of hospitals and managing hospital employees, he said. (RSS)