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Karnataka: OPDs in govt teaching hospitals may be hit as resident docs begin protest on Aug 12The Karnataka Association of Resident Doctors (KARD), which represents government medical college interns, postgraduates, super-speciality residents and senior residents, alleges that is in response to the state government's 'continued inaction'
Udbhavi Balakrishna
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>Resident doctors and postgraduate medical students protest outside the OPD of Victoria Hospital on Monday. </p></div>

Resident doctors and postgraduate medical students protest outside the OPD of Victoria Hospital on Monday.

DH PHOTO/S K DINESH

Bengaluru: Starting Monday, resident doctors in government medical colleges across Karnataka will stage an indefinite protest demanding a stipend hike and a reduction in their college fees.

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They aim to suspend non-emergency services such as outpatient departments and elective operations.

The Karnataka Association of Resident Doctors (KARD), which represents government medical college interns, postgraduates, super-speciality residents and senior residents, alleges that is in response to the state government's "continued inaction" despite repeated appeals.

They claim to be paying the among the highest fees across the country, with at least Rs 1.13 lakh per year for postgraduate courses and Rs 2.27 lakh per year for super-speciality courses. However, PG students receive a monthly stipend between Rs 45,000 and Rs 55,000 while super-speciality students receive between Rs 55,000 and Rs 65,000.

Dr Sirish Shivaramaiah, president, KARD, said, "In AIIMS, Delhi, doctors receive a stipend of 1 lakh per month. In Mumbai, it is Rs 90,000. We put in 70-80 work hours a week but earn effectively very little each month."

He assured that emergency services will continue to operate without disrupting critical care and will also not affect hospitals under the department of health and family welfare. While casualty wards, labour wards and the ICUs will run as usual, OPDs will not have resident doctors.

A statement by the association noted: "The Resident Doctors of Karnataka urge the government to urgently address our demands and to initiate discussions aimed at resolving this issue. Until a fair and just stipend structure is established, the protest will continue indefinitely. We deeply regret and apologise any inconvenience this may cause to patients and the public."

The doctors are asking for a revision of their stipend to be adjusted for inflation each year. The last time their revision occurred was in May 2020. KARD has been writing to the department of medical education, its principal secretary, and the medical education minister since June last year.

Government resident doctors will begin their protest at Freedom Park on Monday by expressing condolences for the woman trainee doctor who was allegedly sexually assaulted and killed inside a government-run hospital in Kolkata on August 9.

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(Published 12 August 2024, 05:27 IST)