Key Points

Junior doctors in Telangana will strike on June 30 over unpaid stipends and poor medical college conditions. They accuse the government of failing to act despite repeated assurances. Faculty shortages and infrastructure gaps persist across 34 medical colleges. The protest aims to push officials to address long-standing grievances.

Key Points: Telangana Junior Doctors Strike Over Pending Stipends and Poor Infrastructure

  • Junior doctors demand pending stipends and salary hikes
  • Strike set for June 30 over unmet promises
  • Medical colleges face faculty and infrastructure shortages
  • Private institutions also report irregular stipend payments
2 min read

Junior doctors in Telangana to go on strike on June 30 over pending stipends, poor infrastructure

Junior doctors in Telangana announce strike on June 30 over delayed stipends, infrastructure gaps in medical colleges.

"We have demanded a stipend hike since January, which has not been cleared. – Dr. Ajay, Gandhi Medical College"

Hyderabad, June 27

Junior doctors in Telangana have announced a strike on June 30, demanding the state government address long-pending stipend payments and critical infrastructure deficiencies in medical colleges.

Dr Ajay from Gandhi Medical College told ANI, "We, the junior doctors of Telangana, are going on strike on the 30th of this month, demanding that the Telangana State government clear our pending stipends. The government has promised that stipends will be credited on the 10th of every month, but there has been a delay. We have also demanded a stipend hike since January, which has not been cleared. Additionally, our medical colleges face infrastructure and faculty deficiencies."

He alleged that despite repeated assurances, the government has failed to act on the long-standing demands of doctors in government medical institutions.

The doctors also pointed out that faculty shortages and inadequate infrastructure plague all 34 medical colleges across the state, including private institutions, where stipend disbursement has also been irregular.

"Despite 34 medical colleges in Telangana, these issues persist. The government has made promises but failed to implement solutions to our problems in all government medical colleges. Private medical colleges also face issues with stipend payments, affecting the students. We have submitted representations to higher officials regarding our demands," Dr Ajay added.

The planned strike aims to push the government to fulfil its promises and resolve these pressing issues. The junior doctors have submitted representations to higher officials, seeking immediate attention to their demands.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As someone whose brother is a junior doctor in Osmania, I can confirm the conditions are pathetic. No proper hostel facilities, delayed stipends by 3-4 months. How do they expect quality healthcare when we treat our doctors like this?
A
Aditya G
While I support the doctors' demands, strikes affect patient care. My mother's surgery got postponed last time. Can't they find alternative ways to protest without harming common people?
S
Shreya B
Telangana government spends crores on unnecessary projects but can't pay stipends on time? Shameful! These doctors work 36-hour shifts and deserve basic respect. #JusticeForMedicos
K
Karthik V
The infrastructure issues are real. I visited Gandhi Medical College last month - broken equipment, leaking roofs. If this is the condition in Hyderabad, imagine rural colleges! Healthcare needs urgent reforms.
M
Michael C
Working in India's healthcare sector seems challenging. In my country, resident doctors have proper contracts and timely payments. Telangana should learn from global best practices to retain medical talent.

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