The Pakistan Medical and Dental Council — the body that accredits medical colleges, doctors and other medical professionals — has recently been in the news for all the wrong reasons.
Corruption allegations and scandals have rocked the body, and not just in the wake of Dr Asim Hussain’s arrest.
Irregularities in the registration of medical colleges and allegations of wrongdoing in the accreditation of doctors have also been levelled in judicial probes of the PMDC’s affairs.
In this special report, Dawn investigates whether the council is experiencing institutional rot, and asks whether the general public can really afford to put blind trust in the health profession anymore.
In 2011, a dental and medical college in Karachi applied for recognition from the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council.Ironically, the request for the recognition, without which no medical institution in Pakistan can offer a degree in medicine, was filed on April 1.
By December the same year, the PMDC approved its case for recognition.
No Pakistani doctor can practice in Pakistan or abroad without being registered with the PMDC and the body registers only those doctors who have studied at a college recognised by the council.
However, two years later, when a judicial commission sent a team to the college, its building was still incomplete.
Many such incidents were reported by the judicial commission — set up under a court order after allegations of embezzlement in the registration of private colleges in 2013 — looking into PMDC’s ‘generosity’ towards new colleges. The commission was headed by former Lahore High Court judge Shabbar Raza Rizvi.
Recommending the de-recognition of the college in Karachi, the commission also said that the hospital attached to the college (where students are supposed to learn how to treat patients) had two wards “but we found them empty except one patient in the male ward”.
It also emerged that when recognition was to be granted, one member of PMDC’s executive committee, Prof Naveed Rashid Qureshi, had himself inserted into the team that was going to inspect the college. He became a member of the team on December 19, 2011, the day before the inspection was to be carried out.
The day after, on December 21, the executive committee approved the recognition of the college.
PMDC recognition ‘a joke’
No wonder those associated with the profession claim that the approval of Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PMDC) for a medical colleges had become a joke.
According to its own mission statement, PMDC has to “establish a uniform minimum standard of basic and higher qualifications in medicine and dentistry throughout Pakistan”.
The process of obtaining PMDC recognition for a medical college takes months, but in the case of some colleges, it only took a couple of days.
With its new found efficiency, from 2010 to 2013, the PMDC recognised 19 medical and dental colleges.
Five of these colleges were located in Sindh (three in Karachi, and one each in Nawabshah and Mirpurkhas); eight were based in Punjab (two each in Lahore and Sialkot, one each in Faisalabad, Gujranwala, Sahiwal and Gujrat), two each in Islamabad and AJK, one in Quetta and one in Bannu, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
The hurried recognition of unsatisfactory institutions started in 2010, when some government officials forwarded 25 such cases to the PMDC and then pushed for their recognition.
The same commission report quoted earlier also examined this incident and found that “the then-registrar Dr Ahmed Nadeem Akbar pointed out to the director general health that the council wanted to limit the establishment of new colleges”.
After Akbar’s objection, the then-ministry of health reduced the number of colleges from 25 to 9 – however, this number later went up to 19. Akbar was eventually removed from the post by the executive committee.
When the report came out, sources in the PMDC claimed that former members of the executive committee had advised medical colleges to approach the courts to delay the matter.
At the time, the PMDC executive committee included Dr Sibtul Hassan, Dr Asim Hussain, Prof. Masood Hameed Khan, Prof. Zubair Khan, Prof. Syed Mohammad Awais and Prof Naveed Rashid Qureshi.
Eventually, the commission recommended that five colleges be de-recognised; but equally importantly, it raised a number of objections on the way in which the other colleges had been given recognition.
For a Lyari-based medical college, the commission noted that when it had applied for recognition, its “faculty was not complete”. Moreover, the college started admissions prior to recognition, a violation overlooked by the PMDC. The college applied for recognition in May 2011 and by December the same year, the executive committee of the PMDC had approved its case.
The strange thing the commission pointed out was the recognition of two medical colleges of Mirpur and Muzafarabad, where the process was completed in a couple of days for both institutions.
The report stated that “the same team (of PMDC) conducted inspections on December 20, 2011 in Mirpur” and the following day in Muzaffarabad.
But it was not just the visiting team that was in such a hurry. “…the inspectors submitted their reports before the executive committee on the date they did the inspection i.e. December 21, the executive committee also held its meeting on the same day and approved the inspectors’ reports.”
In other words, two campuses were visited, reports were prepared, submitted and approved, all during the course of two days.
A medical college in Mirpurkhas stated that PMDC’s executive committee in July 2011 “showed its satisfaction and found sufficient facilities”.
However, when the commission visited the college on June 6, 2013, it “found infrastructure and other facilities in awful condition.”
Criticising the recognition given to a Gujrat-based college, the commission declared that “the whole process has been non-transparent and irregular”.
“Inspectors submitted their reports [on colleges] to the committee on the date they did the inspection i.e. Dec 21, which also held a meeting and approved the inspectors’ reports on the same day”
The commission also identified some deficiencies in the colleges based in Gujranwala, Sialkot and Sahiwal but observed that since these were government colleges, they should be allowed to continue – subject to strict vigilance of the PMDC.
The commission noted that the powerful executive committee always overlooked the “outcry of the registrar” against the violations of the rules and procedure.
The judicial commission report is not the only document that has identified problems in the process of recognition.
An audit by the auditor general’s office from 2013 also points out a number of irregularities in the recognition of medical colleges.
The report says that a number of colleges had no working capital or endowment funds and had provided no evidence of a library. Rawal Institute of Health Sciences, Aziz Fatima Medical, Dental College, Faisalabad and Pakistan Red Crescent Medical and Dental College, Lahore were among those that lacked these facilities.
The audit also pointed out that in some cases, the recommendations of the investigation committee were ignored while awarding recognition.
In some cases, the audit report also found that college buildings were under construction at the time of the inspection or the colleges were operating out of rented buildings or its land was not free of legal disputes.
In one case of a college in Karachi, the building had been constructed initially for a rural health centre which was then turned into an eye hospital, then turned into a general hospital.
Then-PMDC president Dr Masood Hameed Khan could not be contacted; he did not respond to text messages either.
Former PMDC legal advisor Raja Saimul Haq Satti told Dawn that the council had given recognition to many public sector medical and dental colleges as well as private ones.
According to him, public sector colleges were not set up for profit and were meant to serve the general public; “therefore any lapse in the recognition of public sector colleges may be treated as being in ‘good faith’,” he said.
“The commission in the report also noted this and allowed the public sector colleges to run under the strict supervision of the PMDC,” he said, adding that the judicial commission also suggested several remedial measures for bringing the education of the newly registered medical colleges up to par.
Satti said that some colleges had challenged the findings of the commission in the Sindh High Court (SHC) while four had filed petitions in the Islamabad High Court (IHC) and he could not comment on the matter.
Retired Brigadier Hafeezuddin Ahmed Siddiqui, the PMDC registrar, told Dawn that some of the colleges recognised at that time are functioning very well.
He, however, said that the incumbent chairman retired Major General Azhar Mehmood Kayani would re-evaluate all colleges against whom PMDC had received complaints and a 14-member inspection team had been constituted for this purpose.
After a thorough inspection, the colleges could be asked to “stop admissions, improve the quality and infrastructure or they be reprimanded and their recognition be withheld or annulled”.