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A parliamentary panel had been entrusted to review the new National Medical Commission Bill on healthcare in India. Finally, and thankfully it advised the government to scrap its proposal for a bridge course to allow AYUSH (Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, and Homoeopathy) practitioners practice Allopathy.
However, while approving the amendments in the NMC Bill, it was left to the state governments to take necessary measures for addressing and promoting primary healthcare in rural areas. As a result, despite dropping the bridge course from the NMC Bill, the decision has been left to the states.
In fact, many states have already allowed AYUSH doctors appointed in Primary Health Centres in rural areas to practice allopathy during ‘emergencies’. Presently 13 states, including Karnataka, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Assam, and Uttarakhand have made this legal.
It says, in 2001 nearly one third of practitioners calling themselves allopathic doctors were probably just out of school.
Gravity seems all the more telling when one realises that the scenario is extremely distressing in rural India, where:
Recent data of Medical Council of India shows that as on September 2014 total number of doctors qualified in modern medicine was 9.32 lakh and that of AYUSH doctors stood at 6.8 lakh.
It is difficult to understand how this move of the government helps the cause of the rural masses for accessing healthcare.
After all they are a sizable number and are delivering healthcare to the best of their ability not only to the rural masses but also to their urban counterparts especially in the southern states of India, in particular, Kerala.
The treatment, for example, in allopathy is directed towards a particular disease and would be same for all suffering from the disease.
On the other hand, treatment in homeopathy is based more on symptoms and the constitution of the patient for the same disease and thus would be different in different patients. Similarly, the treatment in ayurveda is dependent on the nature of the patient further categorised according to the doshas – Vaat, Pitta and Kapha.
Further, in several decisions by various courts of India, it is clearly stated that the doctor should write his speciality in which he has a complete and recognised training and not some kind of an experience.
The argument advanced is that such trained doctors would be allowed to prescribe only from a predetermined set of allopathic medicines and practice allopathy during ‘emergencies’.
In emergencies or calamities, people who deserve to be treated by well-qualified doctors (of any system) the most, would be denied the same and subjected to this ‘khichri’ system created by the bridge course.
This crash course won’t help them understand when to refer the patient and that can be quote dangerous.
All these disciplines represented by AYUSH are scientific in their own right. In fact, a sizable number of patients even in urban India prefer going to Ayurvedic doctors over Allopaths, especially in Kerala, with gratifying results.
It will be naive to imagine that these doctors getting trained for six months with the so-called bridge course would practice only in the villages and serve the people. After being licensed to practice modern medicine, they may also like to migrate to urban areas as it is more lucrative.
So, if implemented, this is a disaster in the making.
The long-term solution lies only in producing more doctors in all systems of medicine and imparting them the best of training in their respective fields. There’s also a need to increase the presence of public and private healthcare to remotest of regions by giving incentives.
(Dr Ashwini Setya is a Gastroenterologist and Programme Director in Delhi’s Max Super Speciality Hospital. His endeavor is to help people lead a healthy life without medication. He can be reached at ashwini.setya@gmail.com)
(The views expressed above are the author’s own. FIT neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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Published: 04 Apr 2018,01:30 PM IST