Close X
Sunday, November 10, 2024
ADVT 
India

Cheap courses, global recognition draw Indian medical students to Ukraine

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Feb, 2022 12:27 PM
  • Cheap courses, global recognition draw Indian medical students to Ukraine

New Delhi, Feb 28 (IANS) Every year thousands of students from India go to Ukraine for medical education. A big reason for this is the facilities and cheap medical courses offered to the students in Ukraine and the recognition given to Ukrainian universities across the world.

The cost of medical education in a private medical college in Ukraine is half as much as in India, and the process of admission is also much simpler than in India.

There are currently 14 major medical colleges in Ukraine in which more than 18,000 Indian students are pursuing MBBS and BDS courses. Out of these, about 1,000 have returned home while efforts are on to bring back the rest.

Sandeep Dhamija, director of one of the country's renowned medical coaching institutes, says that compared to the number of seats reserved for medical course in Ukraine, few locals apply. This is the reason why medical seats are easily available to foreign students and Indian students get the benefit.

Shirish Mehta, who did his MBBS from Ukraine, says that infrastructure in medical colleges of Ukraine is far better than in India, and also the cost of medical education in Ukraine is not even half of that of private colleges in India.

The cost of medical education in government colleges in India, is around Rs 3 lakh per annum for each student. On the other hand, in private medical colleges of India, this cost goes up to Rs 20 lakh and may increase to Rs 30 lakh annually.

In government medical colleges of India, where the cost of medical education for 5 years comes around Rs 15 to Rs 20 lakh, in private colleges, a student has to shell out more than Rs 80 lakh for the same. In several Indian private medical colleges, this cost goes over Rs 1 crore.

On the other hand in Ukraine, a student doing MBBS has to pay about Rs 5 lakh per year, which takes the overall cost in five years to Rs 25 lakh.

Indian educationist C.S. Kandpal says that one of the major reasons for the popularity of medical education in Ukraine is that students here do not have to take any separate examination to join these courses, whereas in India, NEET examinations are compulsory.

Lakhs of students appear in the NEET exam every year, out of which only about 40,000 get admission in government medical colleges. In such a situation, a large number of NEET qualified Indian students turn to Ukraine.

In Ukraine, NEET qualified students get admission easily and their ranking does not matter.

MORE India ARTICLES

List single decision not implemented, Punjab CM dares Oppn

List single decision not implemented, Punjab CM dares Oppn
Reiterating his government's commitment to implement each and every decision in the right earnest, Channi said that notwithstanding the time constraint, his government would leave no stone unturned to resolve the remaining issues.

List single decision not implemented, Punjab CM dares Oppn

Delhi Police arranges bus for Nihangs heading for Bangla Sahib

Delhi Police arranges bus for Nihangs heading for Bangla Sahib
With farmers protesting at the Delhi borders for over a year, several incidents of protestors clashing with the Delhi Police have been reported. Here Delhi Police have deployed extra personnel and they often talk to the farmers leaders and Haryana Police to maintain peace.

Delhi Police arranges bus for Nihangs heading for Bangla Sahib

Wanted to give expensive gift to girlfriend, says i-Phone thief

Wanted to give expensive gift to girlfriend, says i-Phone thief
Furnishing details about the robbery, a police official said that the incident took place on November 23 when the accused, along with another man, robbed an Apple iPhone after putting a knife on the victim's neck when he was crossing a park in western Delhi.

Wanted to give expensive gift to girlfriend, says i-Phone thief

Confirmation of Omicron cases in India not unexpected: WHO

Confirmation of Omicron cases in India not unexpected: WHO
The detection of two cases of Omicron, the latest variant of Covid-19, in Karnataka was not unexpected in view of the interconnected world that people live in, Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director, WHO South-East Asia, said on Thursday.

Confirmation of Omicron cases in India not unexpected: WHO

Punjab exempts 1.50 lakh cases of traders from assessment

Punjab exempts 1.50 lakh cases of traders from assessment
In a major reprieve to traders ahead of the assembly polls, the Punjab Cabinet on Wednesday decided to exempt about 1.50 lakh cases from assessment related to cases of 'C' form from 2014-15 to 2017-18.

Punjab exempts 1.50 lakh cases of traders from assessment

SAD leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa joins BJP

SAD leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa joins BJP
 Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa on Wednesday joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), ahead of the next year's Punjab Assembly elections.

SAD leader Manjinder Singh Sirsa joins BJP