Monday, February 16, 2026
28.1 C
New Delhi

Centre okays 10k more MedEd seats, to cost Rs 15k crore over 4 years

Centre okays 10k more MedEd seats, to cost Rs 15k crore over 4 years

NEW DELHI: India’s medical education system is set for its biggest expansion yet, with the Cabinet on Wednesday approving the creation of 5,000 new postgraduate seats and 5,023 MBBS seats in govt institutions. It also cleared the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research’s (DSIR) Capacity Building and Human Resource Development scheme with an outlay of Rs 2,277 crore to strengthen India’s R&D pipeline.The Cabinet’s approval for the DSIR scheme will add vigour to India’s R&D ecosystem, with a focus on a culture of innovation as well as excellence, PM Modi said.He also said that approval of Phase-III of the centrally sponsored scheme will add significant number of PG and UG medical seats. “This will improve our healthcare system and enhance medical education infrastructure. It will ensure that every part of India has availability of skilled doctors,” the PM said.The medical education decision will fund the upgrade of state and central medical colleges, standalone PG institutes and govt hospitals, with an enhanced cost ceiling of Rs 1.5 crore per seat.Together, the two initiatives represent a combined push to expand the country’s pool of doctors and scientists. The medical seat expansion scheme carries a financial implication of Rs 15,034 crore over 2025-29, of which the Centre will bear Rs 10,303 crore and states Rs 4,731 crore. Officials said the expansion will ensure a steady pipeline of specialists, introduce new disciplines, and make better use of existing infrastructure.With 808 medical colleges and 1.23 lakh MBBS seats – the largest in the world – India has added over 69,000 MBBS and 43,000 PG seats in the past decade. Yet, gaps remain, particularly in underserved rural and tribal regions. The new approval aims to bridge these gaps while also generating large-scale employment – from doctors and faculty to paramedics and administrators.The DSIR scheme nod will back doctoral and postdoctoral fellowships, extramural research, Bhatnagar Fellowships, and travel and symposia grants. Covering universities, institutes of eminence, national labs and R&D centres, it seeks to expand India’s researcher base, improve global rankings and support STEMM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Medical and Mathematical) disciplines.

Go to Source

Hot this week

UK Police ask govt to delay release of Mandelson documents linked to Epstein as Starmer faces scrutiny: Report

Police have asked the UK government to delay publishing documents linked to Peter Mandelson over his past association with Jeffrey Epstein, says a report. Read More

Israeli cabinet approves ‘de-facto annexation’ of West Bank

Israel’s cabinet has approved measures to tighten the control of the occupied West Bank that have been criticised as the ‘de facto’ annexation of the Palestinian territory. Read More

‘Biased And Baseless’: Russia Rejects Europe’s Navalny Poisoning Allegations

The Kremlin’s response came after five European countries UK, France, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands said the Russian opposition leader was poisoned. Read More

Congress says Om Birla’s Dhaka visit a ‘gift’ for silencing LoP in Lok Sabha

NEW DELHI: Congress leader Akhilesh Prasad Singh made a stark remark against Om Birla’s Bangladesh visit calling it a reward from the Centre for not letting the Leader of Opposition, Rahul Gandhi, speak in the Lok Sabha. Read More

Tamil Nadu: Congress vs Congress erupts as Stalin refuses to blink

NEW DELHI: The simmering debate over power sharing in Tamil Nadu has triggered not just friction between the Congress and its ally, the DMK, but also exposed sharp internal rift within the Congress itself, with the state leadership mo Read More

Topics

UK Police ask govt to delay release of Mandelson documents linked to Epstein as Starmer faces scrutiny: Report

Police have asked the UK government to delay publishing documents linked to Peter Mandelson over his past association with Jeffrey Epstein, says a report. Read More

Israeli cabinet approves ‘de-facto annexation’ of West Bank

Israel’s cabinet has approved measures to tighten the control of the occupied West Bank that have been criticised as the ‘de facto’ annexation of the Palestinian territory. Read More

‘Biased And Baseless’: Russia Rejects Europe’s Navalny Poisoning Allegations

The Kremlin’s response came after five European countries UK, France, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands said the Russian opposition leader was poisoned. Read More

Congress says Om Birla’s Dhaka visit a ‘gift’ for silencing LoP in Lok Sabha

NEW DELHI: Congress leader Akhilesh Prasad Singh made a stark remark against Om Birla’s Bangladesh visit calling it a reward from the Centre for not letting the Leader of Opposition, Rahul Gandhi, speak in the Lok Sabha. Read More

Tamil Nadu: Congress vs Congress erupts as Stalin refuses to blink

NEW DELHI: The simmering debate over power sharing in Tamil Nadu has triggered not just friction between the Congress and its ally, the DMK, but also exposed sharp internal rift within the Congress itself, with the state leadership mo Read More

Ajit Pawar Air Crash: Recovered Black Box May Be Sent Abroad For Analysis, Says Govt Source

The DGCA has begun a parallel investigation into the aircraft’s airworthiness and operational condition. Read More

Indian Railways New Plan: AI To Monitor Train Toilets, Staff To Face Fines If Standards Aren’t Met

Indian Railways has introduced an AI-based system on 100 trains to monitor toilet and coach cleanliness. Read More

‘Unfortunate’: Eknath Shinde Reacts After ‘Purification’ Of Temple Following Abdul Sattar’s Visit

Soon after Sattar’s visit, the group reportedly carried out what they described as a “cleansing” ritual by sprinkling cow urine inside the temple premises. Read More

Related Articles