The Paradox of J&K’s newly established Medical Colleges
The
Paradox of J&K’s newly established Medical Colleges
“While Jammu and Kashmir celebrates increased seats of MBBS in newly
established medical colleges, which are district hospitals turned into medical
colleges, the facilities remain unchanged. Without proper infrastructure and
faculty, expanding intake risks producing underprepared doctors and
overburdened hospitals.”
Peerzada Mohsin Shafi
The recent announcement by the National Medical
Commission to increase the intake capacity of medical colleges across the
country has sparked widespread excitement. In Jammu and Kashmir, social media
overflowed with congratulatory messages as many newer medical colleges set up
after 2019, received an increase of MBBS seats. While the older institutions
with established infrastructure truly deserve this expansion, the same cannot
be said for the newly established colleges that were district hospitals converted
into medical colleges. The increase in seats for these new colleges is
premature and misplaced. This decision might have been commendable if it came
after substantial improvements in the infrastructure of these colleges and
their associated hospitals. Unfortunately, the reality is starkly different.
The government’s effort to upgrade district hospitals into medical colleges was
intended to improve healthcare access in remote areas of Jammu and Kashmir. But
in most cases, only the signboards have changed. The buildings, equipment,
wards and facilities remain almost the same as before. The old structures, overburdened
staff and limited diagnostic capacity continue to define healthcare in these
areas. Even years after being designated medical colleges, these institutions
still refer patients to SKIMS and GMC Srinagar for specialized care. The
promise of decentralizing healthcare remains unfulfilled as these colleges
often operate more like outpatient centres than teaching hospitals.
Adding to this misplaced enthusiasm, MD and DNB
seats have also been allotted to these new colleges. However, this move is
largely symbolic and mocks the very idea of progress since the essential
infrastructure and faculty needed to run postgraduate programs are missing.
This is a token gesture rather than a real effort to enhance medical education
and training. The absence of critical diagnostic and interventional facilities
is glaring. Most of the colleges do not have fully functional departments and
many face severe faculty shortages. Junior doctors are often placed as
in-charge heads of departments which undermines the quality of training.
Laboratories are under-equipped and clinical exposure for students remains
limited, often below the national standard. None of these new colleges can
currently claim to have all the departments or infrastructure needed to operate
as a full teaching hospital yet. This harms
patient care and jeopardizes the quality of medical education for future
doctors. Mere press releases, photo opportunities and superficial accolades
cannot compensate for this deficiency.
The deeper concern is that this reflects a
pattern seen before. When engineering colleges were rapidly opened across the
country a few years ago, they too lacked adequate laboratories, faculty and
industry linkages. Thousands of engineering graduates today struggle with
unemployment or underemployment because their colleges were ill-equipped to
prepare them for real challenges. The same mistake is now being repeated in the
medical sector. Expanding seats without building infrastructure risks producing
a generation of doctors who are poorly trained and unprepared for clinical
realities. This will burden an already overstretched healthcare system and
degrade both education and patient care. In most developed countries expansion
in medical education happens only after a thorough evaluation of
infrastructure, faculty strength and hospital capacity. The World Federation
for Medical Education clearly states that expansion should follow infrastructure
development, not the other way around. Sadly, in Jammu and Kashmir the process
is reversed. Intake has been increased first and infrastructure is expected to
catch up eventually, without clear timelines or accountability. This approach
weakens the foundation of medical education and public health planning and
risks turning medical colleges into under-resourced institutions struggling to
meet basic standards.
While increasing seats seems like a good idea to
address the doctor shortage, intention alone is not enough. The government must
make infrastructure development the core priority. Hospitals should have modern
diagnostic and treatment facilities before intake is increased. Faculty
recruitment must be strengthened and proper teaching and residential facilities
for staff and students ensured. Without this the new colleges will remain
upgraded district hospitals only in name. Every medical college in Jammu and Kashmir
should be a self-sufficient healthcare hub serving its local population. A
patient in Kupwara or Rajouri should not have to travel to Srinagar or Jammu
for specialized care. That was the purpose behind converting district hospitals
into medical colleges. Until this vision is realized with actual infrastructure
and services, these conversions remain symbolic. Increasing seats on paper will
not save lives in emergency wards. If this trend continues Jammu and Kashmir
will have more medical colleges but very few capable of producing competent
doctors. The Union Territory will continue to depend on a few tertiary
institutions for specialized care. Real progress cannot be measured by the
number of colleges or seats but by the quality-of-care patients receive and the
ability of doctors to serve effectively.
Jammu and Kashmir stands at a critical
crossroads. The people deserve hospitals that heal and colleges that truly
teach, not institutions that exist only on paper. Infrastructure is not a
luxury in medical education but the foundation everything else depends on.
Increasing seats without upgrading infrastructure is like building more floors
on a weak foundation. The structure may stand for a while but will eventually
collapse. The government must recognize infrastructure development is not an
afterthought but the first step toward quality healthcare and education. Only
then will the dream of accessible and reliable healthcare for every citizen of
Jammu and Kashmir become a reality.
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