Kerala Doctors Threaten Indefinite Strike Amid Government Apathy Crisis

Kerala's medical college doctors are threatening an indefinite strike over government neglect of their long-pending demands. The doctors have highlighted multiple unresolved issues including pay anomalies and unpaid arrears from the 2016 pay revision. They criticized the government for failing to create new teaching positions in recently established medical colleges. The association warned that stronger action will follow if the government continues its indifference toward their concerns.

Key Points: Kerala Medical College Doctors Warn Indefinite Strike Over Demands

  • Doctors demand rectification of pay anomalies affecting Assistant Professors' entry-level salaries
  • Unpaid arrears from 2016 pay revision despite other employees receiving dues
  • Government failure to create new posts in Kasaragod and Wayanad medical colleges
  • Unjust pension ceiling imposed on doctors drawing central-scale salaries
2 min read

Kerala: Medical college doctors threaten indefinite strike over govt apathy

KGMCTA threatens indefinite strike over unpaid arrears, pay anomalies, and infrastructure neglect. Doctors warn of healthcare disruption if government fails to address long-pending demands.

"It is deeply regrettable that doctors who risked their lives during the Covid crisis and brought pride to the state have been completely ignored - KGMCTA statement"

Thiruvananthapuram Oct 30

The Kerala Government Medical College Teachers’ Association (KGMCTA) has accused the state government of turning a blind eye to the long-pending demands of medical college doctors, even as the Cabinet announced a slew of welfare measures in its latest meeting.

The association on Thursday said the continued neglect of medical college doctors — who shoulder both patient care and teaching responsibilities — was “deeply unjust” and warned of launching an indefinite strike if the government failed to intervene.

KGMCTA said none of its key demands had been addressed despite repeated assurances. These include rectifying anomalies in the entry-level pay structure, clearing arrears from the 2016 pay revision, creating new teaching and medical posts in recently established colleges, improving hospital infrastructure, releasing pending dearness allowance (DA) dues, and lifting what it called an “unfair” pension ceiling imposed on state-paid faculty.

The association pointed out that pay anomalies affecting Assistant Professors have made government service unattractive, pushing young doctors toward the private sector.

Although the 2016 pay revision was implemented belatedly in 2020, arrears remain unpaid, even as other state employees have received their full dues.

“It is deeply regrettable that doctors who risked their lives during the Covid crisis and brought pride to the state have been completely ignored,” the statement said.

KGMCTA also criticised the government’s failure to sanction new posts in medical colleges at Kasaragod and Wayanad. “Files related to post creation have been gathering dust in the Health and Finance departments for over a year, despite repeated government promises,” it noted.

The association added that imposing a pension ceiling aligned to state scales — while medical college doctors draw central-scale salaries — was “unjust and demoralising.”

Warning of stronger action, KGMCTA said its Central Executive Committee would convene soon to decide on an indefinite strike if the government continued its indifference.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As someone from Kasaragod, I can confirm our medical college desperately needs more doctors. Files gathering dust for over a year? This is typical government bureaucracy. Patients are suffering while officials take their sweet time.
A
Arjun K
While I support the doctors' demands, I hope they consider the impact on patients before going on indefinite strike. Maybe they can explore other protest methods that don't affect healthcare services. There has to be a middle path.
S
Sarah B
The pension ceiling issue is particularly unfair. How can you pay central-scale salaries but impose state-scale pension limits? This government needs to honor its commitments to healthcare professionals.
V
Vikram M
My cousin is an assistant professor in a government medical college. He's seriously considering moving to Dubai because the pay disparity is huge. If we don't value our doctors, they will leave. Simple as that.
M
Michael C
Kerala's healthcare system was praised globally during the pandemic. Now the same doctors are being treated like this? Shameful! The government should resolve this before the situation escalates further. 🏥

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