City
Epaper

Kerala Medical College doctors call for 'total strike' on November 13

By IANS | Updated: November 7, 2025 14:40 IST

Thiruvananthapuram, Nov 7 Doctors, under the Kerala Government Medical College Teachers' Association (KGMCTA), have called for a "complete ...

Open in App

Thiruvananthapuram, Nov 7 Doctors, under the Kerala Government Medical College Teachers' Association (KGMCTA), have called for a "complete strike" on November 13, withdrawing from all duties except emergency services.

There are 12 state-run medical colleges in Kerala, which have a bed strength of around 5,000.

The association said the decision came after the state government "failed" to respond to repeated appeals for talks despite weeks of peaceful protests.

The KGMCTA said the government had chosen to "turn a blind eye" to their genuine grievances and had instead adopted an undemocratic and disparaging attitude towards the medical teaching community.

"This approach is a challenge not only to doctors but also to the general public who rely on government medical colleges for quality treatment," the association said.

The KGMCTA clarified that its agitation was initially designed to avoid inconvenience to patients.

However, with the government maintaining "silence", the association said it was compelled to escalate to a boycott of outpatient (OP) services.

During the earlier three-day OP boycott, even patients referred from distant regions for specialist care could be attended to only by postgraduate students, offering limited temporary treatment.

The association alleged that despite this "clear signal of distress", the government neither initiated discussions nor showed any willingness to resolve the issue.

It warned that the responsibility for any inconvenience caused to the public during the strike would rest squarely with the government.

The KGMCTA's principal demand is the correction of pay anomalies in entry-level positions in government medical colleges.

The association said these disparities have persisted for years, undermining morale and widening pay gaps between medical teachers and their counterparts in other government services.

The strike call marks a sharp escalation in the ongoing standoff between the government and medical college faculty, and comes amid growing concern over the impact such protests could have on patient care across the state's teaching hospitals.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsAll-format ambition a driving force behind Karnataka's run machine Smaran Ravichandran

NationalED arrests retired IAS officer in multi-crore Chhattisgarh liquor scam

BusinessComviva & Global Money Exchange win IBSi Global FinTech Innovation Award for Transforming Cross-Border Payments

NationalSC has recognised Ministry’s Green Aravalli Project; rumours unfounded: Bhupender Yadav

BusinessAdani Power sharpens growth plans to boost India's energy security

National Realted Stories

National'Not LoP, but Leader of Propaganda': BJP blasts Rahul over 'maligning' India abroad 

National2026 TN Assembly polls: Piyush Goyal begins seat-sharing talks with AIADMK

NationalAmayra suicide case: Jaipur's Neerja Modi School acts after 50 days, two teachers suspended

NationalDelhi HC grants injunction in favour of Gavaskar in personality rights case

NationalChild sexual abuse case: J&K court sentences accused to 12 years rigorous imprisonment