Sahiwal Medical College asked not to admit students

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2015-06-01T15:47:40+05:00 admin

MN Report

SAHIWAL- The Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PMDC) has directed the University of Health Sciences to stop admissions for 2015-16 session at the Sahiwal Medical College (SMC), giving its final decision to the varsity for “closing the government college” due to shortcomings till further orders.

According the sources, the PMDC wrote to the UHS vice chancellor stating that the college failed to meet the minimum standard set by the council to ensure quality education to students.

The PMDC had already withdrawn SMC’s recognition for its failure to meet the criteria when its inspection team found critical dearth of the faculty a couple of years ago for the 100 students being admitted annually.

The council, the sources added, had been giving warning to the SMC through UHS to address the deficiency of the faculty. It first ‘de-recognised’ this public sector college putting the future of 500 students at risk and now directed the UHS to stop admissions till further orders.

Unfortunately, the final-year session of the first batch of this college will pass from this ‘de-recognised’ institute with a tag of “unregistered” graduates, the sources said, adding that 500 students of the DG Khan Medical College were unsure about their future as their college was not recognised by the PMDC since its establishment in 2010.

According to the PMDC criteria ‘every individual/institution intending to establish a medical/dental college must apply for an inspection to the PMDC prior to advertisement for applications of admission in first-year class.’

As the Punjab government started admitting students without applying for the first inspection, the college is still not in the official record of the PMDC.

Recently, the PMDC had also given a final warning to the old medical institute, Quaid-i-Azam Medical College, Bahawalpur, of de-recognising it for not overcoming the deficiency of faculty.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for UHS, Mohammad Atif, has confirmed that the varsity had brought the matter into the notice of the Punjab’s health authorities who are taking keen interest to help resolve the issue on a war-footing basis.

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