New Delhi: Union Health Minister J P Nadda has advocated the inclusion of the latest technological advancements, artificial intelligence, telemedicine, and digital healthcare in the revised medical education curriculum.
In his address at a post-budget webinar series organised by the Health Ministry on Wednesday, he sought the framing of a curriculum that is more vibrant, meaningful, and fit to current challenges and makes optimum use of existing infrastructure and medical faculty.
He emphasised the need for adding soft skills to increase the empathy, ethics, and communication skills of the medical students and said that "the biggest investment is the investment in people".
Nadda underlined that the government was working with a "holistic approach" that focuses not only on the curative aspect but also on the preventive, palliative, and rehabilitative approach to patient care.
"We are also trying to include AYUSH and other medical systems to ensure the availability and access to healthcare for the people."
Addressing the event, Nadda said, "Since cancer treatment is a lengthy process with a long cycle of chemotherapy, the government is focusing on engaging with Day Care Cancer Centres rather than big hospitals to ensure engagement of patients post-chemotherapy sessions."
"The government will establish Day Care Cancer Centres in all district hospitals over the next three years. Two hundred of these will be set up this year itself."
Union Minister On The Importance Of Strengthening The Medical Health System
Underlining the importance of strengthening the medical health system, Nadda reiterated the budget announcements of introducing new medical seats and highlighted the government's efforts to ensure the availability and accessibility of quality healthcare to people through more than 1.75 lakh Ayushman Aarogya Mandirs.
The minister said that the number of medical colleges has increased from 387 in 2014 to 780 now and underlined that there has been a 130 per cent rise in the number of seats for undergraduate and a 135 per cent growth in seats for postgraduate courses during the same period.
He also supported the suggestions made during the webinar such as faculty pooling among medical institutes, hiring retired teachers as visiting faculties to make unviable institutions viable, incorporating competency-based medical education, early clinical exposure for students, and enhanced communication skills for both students and faculty.
Highlighting the developments made in medical infrastructure for cancer care, Nadda mentioned the establishment of the National Cancer Institute at AIIMS-Jhajjar, the upgradation of Chittaranjan National Cancer Institute in Kolkata and the setting up of oncology departments in all 22 AIIMS.
Citing a recent LANCET study, he underlined that "timely cancer treatment initiation has improved significantly because of the Ayushman Bharat Jan Aarogya Yojna. Patients enrolled under AB-PMJAY saw a 90 per cent rise in access to cancer treatment within 30 days."
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