Medical Council of India Standing Orders

Extent of Application.

1.           These Standing Orders shall apply to all servants of Medical Council of India.  They shall not apply in whole and in part to any servant of the Medical Council of India, between whom and the Council a specific contract or agreement subsists in respect of any matter dealt with in these Standing Orders or to any Council servant, to whom the competent authority may, by general or special order, direct that they shall not apply in whole or in part.  If any doubt arises as to whether these Standing Orders apply to any person or not, the decision shall lie with the Medical Council of India.

2.    Nothing in these Standing Orders shall be construed to alter or interpret to his disadvantage the rule regulating the service of any of the Council’s servants on the date of application of these Standing Orders.

3.   The power of interpreting, changing and amending these Standing Orders is vested in the Medical Council of India.

4.   In case where these Standing Orders do not make any provision, the Government of India Rules shall apply.

 

Indian Medical Council Rules, 1957

O BE PUBLISHED IN PART II- SECTION 3 OF THE GAZETTE OF INDIA
No.F.5-2/57-MI.Government of India Ministry of Health
Dated New Delhi, the 16th April, 1957.

NOTIFICATION

S.R.O. In exercise of the powers conferred by section 4 and 32 of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956(102 of 1956), the Central Government hereby makes the following rules, namely:-

THE INDIAN MEDICAL DEGREES ACT, 1916

An Act to regulate the grant of titles implying qualification in Western medical Science and the assumption and use by unqualified persons of such title.

THE INDIAN MEDICAL COUNCIL ACT, 1956

AN ACT TO PROVIDE FOR THE RECONSTITUTION OF THE MEDICAL COUNCIL OF INDIA AND THE MAINTENANCE OF A MEDICAL REGISTER FOR INDIA AND FOR MATTERS CONNECTED THEREWITH.

THE DRUGS AND COSMETICS ACT, 1940

THE DRUGS AND COSMETICS ACT, 1940.[Act 23 of 1940 as amended up to Act 26 of 2008]
An Act to regulate the import, manufacture, distribution and sale of drugs and cosmetics.

Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram RBSK

The Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India, under the National Health Mission launched the Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK), an innovative and ambitious initiative, which envisages Child Health Screening and Early Intervention Services, a systemic approach of early identi¬fication and link to care, support and treatment. This programme subsumes the existing school health programme.

Child Health Screening and Early Intervention Services basically refer to early detection and management of a set of 30 health conditions prevalent in children less than 18 years of age. These conditions are broadly Defects at birth, Diseases in children, Deficiency conditions and Developmental delays including Disabilities – 4D’s.

responsibilities of government employees to stop child marriage

Alternate vaccine delivery AVD fund guideline

75 and 150 rupees per session