The Indian Express 02.08.2013
PMC sets up committee to identify bogus doctors
department has set up a committee to identify bogus doctors in the city.
Faced with several complaints about unqualified doctors prescribing
treatment and practising medicine, the PMC decided to set up a panel
that will meet in the first week of August.
The committee will be headed by PMC Commissioner Mahesh Pathak
and include Dr S T Pardeshi, acting chief medical officer, Dr Kishore
Pakhare, assistant medical officer, apart from four zonal medical
officers. An effort had earlier been launched by the district
collector’s office to conduct a massive crackdown on bogus doctors,
while on their part, the Pimpri Chinchwad Municipal Corporation too had
initiated action against doctors three-four years ago.
This is, however, the first time that the PMC has decided to set
up a committee based on government guidelines and conduct regular
meetings to act on complaints against such doctors. Pardeshi said there
are 2,119 dispensaries and 545 nursing homes currently. Medical officers
will conduct inspections and check whether the doctors are qualified or
not.
Pakhare said documents like degree certificates and registration
with any of the medical councils will be checked. He admitted that so
far there were 10 complaints and a meeting will be held soon. There are
pending complaints too where patients have provided information about
malpractices by certain doctors who claim to cure orthopaedic ailments.
Initially, the drive will be to check whether the doctors are qualified,
Pardeshi said, adding that if he/she does not have a qualification, a
court case would be filed.
While the PMC has set up the committee for the first time, at the
district collector’s office, a committee set up for the same purpose
has already taken decisive action against eight so-called doctors from
the rural areas. Dr N D Deshmukh, member secretary of the committee and
district health officer, said that they were not registered with any
medical council. There is a disturbing trend though as once their
dispensaries or places from where the ‘fake’ doctors operate are shut
down, they move on to another village and start operations.
Dr Jayant Navrange, secretary of the medico-legal cell of the Indian
Medical Association (IMA), said they had launched a similar activity a
couple of years ago and names of 2,000 unqualified medical practitioners
had been collated. The names were then submitted to the police
commissioner’s office, Navrange said.