Health Bulletin 18/December/2025
Here are the top health stories for the day:
Health Ministry issues reminder to NMC to ensure stipend parity for MBBS interns
To ensure that the MBBS interns studying in government and private medical colleges get the same stipend amount, the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) had recently directed the National Medical Commission (NMC) to examine the possibility of paying equal stipend to all the MBBS interns of a State or Union Territory.
NMC directs medical colleges to set up prescription monitoring panels, stress legible prescribing
Observing the need for strengthened and structured monitoring of prescription practices across all medical colleges, the National Medical Commission (NMC) recently instructed all medical colleges across India to constitute Sub-Committees under the Drugs and Therapeutics Committee (DTC), to monitor prescriptions and ensure compliance with the statutory, regulatory, and ethical standards.
As per the directive issued by the Postgraduate Medical Education Board (PGMEB) of the National Medical Commission (NMC), such subcommittees shall-
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Supreme Court issues notice, grants relief to private hospitals challenging Kerala Clinical Establishments Act
The Supreme Court has recently issued notice in a plea challenging the constitutional validity of the provisions of the Kerala Clinical Establishments (Registration and Regulation) Act, 2018, and the Rules framed under it.
Under Section 39 of the Act, every clinical establishment is mandated to display the fee rate and package rate of all services provided. Challenging this, the Kerala Private Hospitals Association approached the Apex Court, arguing that the Act does not define expressions such as "fee rate" and "package rate", making compliance arbitrary and exposing hospitals and clinics to subjective enforcement by authorities.
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Pune admission scam: 10 medical aspirants duped of Rs 1.3 crore, 2 booked
In a medical admissions fraud case, two individuals allegedly defrauded 10 students of Rs 1.3 crore.
The Baner police are currently searching for these two fraudsters. Police suspect that the men operated from an office in Balewadi, where they promised the aspirants admission to various medical colleges in Maharashtra.
The crime occurred between November 1st and December 6th and came to light when the father of one student, a 52-year-old man from Chandrapur, filed a complaint with the police on Sunday.
For more details, check out the full story on the link below:
10 medical aspirants duped of Rs 1.3 crore in Pune admission fraud, 2 booked
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