
LG V K Saxena approves dissolution of Delhi Medical Council over irregularities
The Delhi Medical Council is an autonomous statutory body responsible for regulating the practice of medicine in the national capital. It ensures that ethical standards are maintained by private doctors to safeguard patient safety.
He also directed the Health Department to initiate the process for the reconstitution of the DMC and to ensure that the entire process is completed within two months.
New Delhi, Jun 17 (PTI) Lt Governor V K Saxena has approved the proposal of the Delhi government for the dissolution of the Delhi Medical Council over alleged irregularities, officials said on Tuesday.
Officials from the Health Department had sent a proposal to Saxena seeking control over the body under Section 29 of the DMC Act, 1997. The proposal recommended the dissolution of the council for a specified period.
In the note to the department, Saxena noted that the DMC had unilaterally extended the retirement age of the Registrar from 60 years to 65 years without government approval and further extended his term by one year from December 1, 2024.
The DMC, while responding to a showcause notice issued in February this year, said the concerned official had resigned with immediate effect but did not share further details, the LG note said.
Saxena noted that the DMC 'exceeded' and 'abused' the powers granted to it by the Act. He concurred with the proposal of the Health Department for the dissolution of the Delhi Medical Council.
Saxena also directed that two ex-officio members of the Delhi Medical Council may continue in the Council and DGHS may be assigned the responsibilities of Registrar for the intervening period. PTI SLB HIG HIG
This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Doon residents demand urgent tree health survey after three die by tree collapse
Dehradun: At least three people lost their lives in the state capital this pre-monsoon season due to incidents of trees collapsing, despite environmental activists urging authorities for nearly a decade to conduct a comprehensive survey and health assessment of Dehradun's trees. "Last year, we learned that the Chandigarh Municipal Corporation had engaged the Forest Research Institute (FRI) in 2013 to conduct a tree census and health survey within their municipality limits. In June, we met the then municipal commissioner in Dehradun and proposed a similar initiative here," said Sanjeev Srivastava, eco-activist and member of Dehradun-based environmental organisation Citizens for Green Doon. Following appeals from environmentalists, the Dehradun Municipal Corporation (DMC) wrote to FRI in Aug last year, seeking a survey like Chandigarh's. Documents accessed by TOI, reveal that Chandigarh municipality had allocated Rs 44 lakh for their tree health survey. "FRI asked the corporation to provide details of areas requiring the survey so they could prepare a cost estimate. However, there's been no progress in the past year, and the project was never handed over to new officers. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like These £39.90 Sandals Are Selling Out in Porthcawl Today wellnesstodayonline Buy Now Undo The callousness on the part of civic agencies is baffling. They don't act on time, and when unfortunate accidents happen, authorities often use it as an excuse to fell trees indiscriminately. Had a scientific health check been conducted, these incidents might have been prevented. We have FRI's services available right here in the city, yet it's not being utilised," said Srivastava. Environmentalists have renewed calls for a scientific tree health assessment. They also blame the concretisation around tree bases for weakening their stability. Meanwhile, DMC officials said they have written to the Chandigarh corporation to understand the details of their agreement with FRI. "We are also in talks with FRI to conduct this exercise pro bono, and we have a meeting scheduled with them in the first week of July," said municipal commissioner Namami Bansal.


India Today
10 hours ago
- India Today
Court orders preservation of dead man's semen as mother seeks it for lineage
The Bombay High Court has directed a Mumbai-based fertility centre to preserve the frozen semen of a 21-year-old cancer patient who died earlier this year, after his mother approached the court seeking to use it to continue the family's mother, a resident of Santacruz in Mumbai, told the court that her son had been diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma — a rare form of bone and soft tissue cancer. Before starting chemotherapy, his oncologist advised the family to freeze his semen as the aggressive treatment could affect his to the mother's petition, the family was confident the young man would recover, but were unaware that he had independently signed a consent form instructing the fertility centre to destroy his semen if he did not survive. The family, which now comprises only women following the deaths of the father and uncle, said the son was the sole male heir. The 21-year-old passed away on February 16 this year. Amid their bereavement, the family requested the fertility centre to transfer the preserved semen to a facility in Gujarat for further medical advice. However, the centre refused without a legal directive, citing the man's signed with no other option, the mother wrote to various government offices but received no response. She then filed a petition in the Bombay High plea came up before Justice Manish Pitale, who observed that the matter raises significant questions about how semen or gametes should be handled after the donor's death under the Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act, 2021, and its rules. "This becomes particularly significant in the present case, for the reason that the deceased, being the son of the petitioner, was unmarried at the time of his death," Justice Pitale for the Union of India, Advocate Yashodeep Deshmukh referred to a pre-ART Act judgement of the Delhi High Court, where frozen semen was handed over to the parents of a person. However, he pointed out that unlike that case, the young man here had explicitly opted for disposal of his samples after his court also took note that in the Delhi High Court judgement, directions had been issued to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to consider framing appropriate laws or guidelines for posthumous sought time to verify whether any such guidelines now exist under the ART to ensure that the mother's plea does not become futile, the Bombay High Court ordered the fertility centre to preserve the frozen semen until the matter is decided.- EndsMust Watch


India Today
11 hours ago
- India Today
Delhi hospitals, police stations to be paired up for faster emergency response
Delhi Lieutenant Governor VK Saxena on Friday approved the linking and re-distribution of police stations to designated hospitals for handling Medico Legal Cases (MLCs) and conducting Postmortem Examinations (PMEs). The initiative, aligned with the recently enacted Criminal Justice Acts, is aimed at ensuring quicker and more effective medical and forensic responses in cases such as road accidents, sexual assault and other emergencies requiring urgent medico-legal approval came after a comprehensive interdepartmental review involving Delhi Police, the Home Department and the Health and Family Welfare Department of the GNCTD. Initially, Delhi Police submitted a consolidated list of police stations with their existing and proposed hospital linkages. The Health Department then developed a proposal addressing delays and inefficiencies in current medico-legal procedures.A committee under the Health Department conducted a detailed study and recommended optimal pairings between police stations and hospitals to reduce emergency response times and streamline medico-legal protocols. These proposals were vetted for feasibility by the Home Department in consultation with police and healthcare the Law Department reviewed the draft notification and made necessary legal amendments. The final re-distribution has been implemented under Section 194(3) of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) Act, measure is expected to strengthen coordination between law enforcement and healthcare systems, enabling timely medical aid and medico-legal documentation. Officials believe it will play a critical role in improving justice delivery by minimising procedural delays in criminal cases involving victims.- EndsMust Watch IN THIS STORY#Delhi