A.P. Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy strikes a chord with medical students
The Hindu
Not all angels have wings, some have stethoscopes, Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy says, and advises medical students to become best doctors with a humane touch.
Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy pressed all the right buttons with his pep talk to the students after inaugurating five medical colleges on September 15.
The Chief Minister personally inaugurated the campus in Vizianagaram district and declared open the remaining four remotely.
“Not all angels have wings, some have stethoscopes,” Mr. Jagan Mohan Reddy said, and jotted the same on an interactive flat panel and affixed his signature.
Striking a chord with the medical students present there, the Chief Minister said he firmly believed that they would become reputed doctors in the near future.
“In the next five years, you will become doctors. With God’s grace, you will become the best PG students and best doctors as well. People have lot of hopes and aspirations on medicos. Keep it in mind always,” Mr. Jagan Mohan Reddy said, and wished them all the best.
“The government is adopting a policy that ensures there is no shortage of specialist doctors. While 61% of specialist doctor posts are lying vacant on an average nationally, the State’s average is a mere 3.96%. The government has formed a recruitment board and has conducted special recruitments to fill the vacancies,” he said.
While 27% of the nurse posts were vacant at the national level, it was zero percent in Andhra Pradesh. Similarly, while 33% of the lab technician posts in the government general hospitals were vacant nationally, it was zero in the State, he said.
“Writing, in general, is a very solitary process,” says Yauvanika Chopra, Associate Director at The New India Foundation (NIF), which, earlier this year, announced the 12th edition of its NIF Book Fellowships for research and scholarship about Indian history after Independence. While authors, in general, are built for it, it can still get very lonely, says Chopra, pointing out that the fellowship’s community support is as valuable as the monetary benefits it offers. “There is a solid community of NIF fellows, trustees, language experts, jury members, all of whom are incredibly competent,” she says. “They really help make authors feel supported from manuscript to publication, so you never feel like you’re struggling through isolation.”
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