Key Points

The Indian government has taken a significant step in healthcare education by introducing standardized, competency-based curricula for 10 allied health professions. This initiative aims to produce globally competitive healthcare professionals and address the growing demand for quality medical services. The new curriculum represents a comprehensive approach to skill development, aligning educational outcomes with industry requirements. By promoting uniformity and digital accessibility, the government hopes to strengthen India's healthcare workforce and support the Swastha Bharat vision.

Key Points: Centre Sets Global Standard for Healthcare Professionals Training

  • Centre launches standardized healthcare professional curricula
  • New training programs align with global industry needs
  • Initiative supports Swastha Bharat vision
  • First phase of comprehensive educational transformation
2 min read

New curricula to set a benchmark for quality of healthcare professionals: Centre

India launches competency-based curricula for 10 healthcare professions, aiming to enhance global skill standards and national healthcare capacity

"India is skilling its healthcare professionals not just for India, but for the globe - Punya Salila Srivastava, Health Secretary"

New Delhi, April 23

The government on Wednesday launched competency-based curricula for 10 allied and healthcare professions, which are designed to produce globally competent allied and healthcare professionals to address the increasing prevalence of diseases, and the growing demand for allied services.

Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, in collaboration with the National Commission for Allied and Healthcare Professions (NCAHP), have launched the curricula.

Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava underscored the government's steadfast commitment to strengthening capacity building and improving the quality of education and training across all domains of the healthcare sector.

She highlighted that "the comprehensive revision and standardization of the curricula represent a pivotal step toward establishing consistency in educational content and delivery".

"India is skilling its healthcare professionals not just for India, but for the globe. The curricula launched today will set a benchmark for the quality of healthcare professionals across various faculties," she noted.

Underlining the importance of the professions for which new curriculum has been launched, Srivastava stated that "these professions play a crucial role in preventive, promotive, curative and rehabilitative healthcare".

This initiative is expected to significantly enhance the effectiveness of skill-based training, better align educational outcomes with industry needs, and promote greater career mobility and professional recognition for allied health professionals nationwide.

She further added that "the success of these curricula depends not only on their design and content but also on the strength of the systems that support their rollout".

"This includes adequate institutional preparedness, faculty training, infrastructure development, and continuous monitoring to uphold quality standards. Digital modules of the curriculum will be crowd sourced to make them available to all for their capacity building so that the vision of Swastha Bharat can be promoted," she mentioned.

Dr Yagna Unmesh Shukla, chairperson NCAHP, stated that "these curricula will ensure uniformity and an important step in the direction of actualizing the vision of 'One Nation, One Curriculum'. It is important to note that this marks the first phase of the curriculum rollout".

Furthermore, the curricula have been carefully realigned with the regulatory standards and provisions outlined in the National Commission for Allied and Healthcare Professions (NCAHP) Act, 2021.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya K.
This is such a welcome move! Standardized curricula will definitely improve healthcare quality across India. As someone whose sister is studying physiotherapy, I know how inconsistent training can be between institutions. 👏
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Rahul M.
Hope this includes proper practical training too. Many healthcare courses focus too much on theory. The digital modules sound promising though!
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Ananya S.
While I appreciate the initiative, I'm concerned about implementation. Rural healthcare centers often lack basic infrastructure - how will they adopt these new standards? The government needs to address this gap first.
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Sanjay P.
'One Nation, One Curriculum' is a great vision! This will help healthcare professionals work anywhere in India without retraining. About time we standardized medical education.
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Neha T.
The crowd-sourced digital modules are a brilliant idea! Makes quality education accessible to everyone. Hope they include regional language options too. 🇮🇳
V
Vikram J.
As a practicing radiologist, I welcome this move. The healthcare field has needed standardized training for allied professionals for years. Better late than never!

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