Centre Replaces Dental Council of India with National Dental Commission

Date:

In a major reform in dental education and regulation, the Central government has replaced the Dental Council of India with the National Dental Commission (NDC), ushering in sweeping changes under the National Dental Commission Act, 2023.

The move is aimed at modernising dental education, improving transparency, and strengthening regulatory oversight across the country.


National Exit Test Mandatory for BDS Students

Under the new framework, final-year BDS students will be required to clear a National Exit Test (Dental):

  • Acts as a licentiate exam to practice dentistry
  • Serves as entrance for MDS (postgraduate) courses

This uniform exam is expected to standardise evaluation and improve quality in dental education.


Fee Regulation in Private Dental Colleges

The National Dental Commission is expected to introduce fee regulation:

  • Applicable to 50% seats in private dental colleges and deemed universities
  • Aimed at reducing high tuition costs
  • Likely to benefit thousands of students

Digital ‘Live National Register’ for Dentists

A Live National Register is being planned to streamline professional mobility:

  • Enables dentists to transfer registration across states easily
  • Reduces bureaucratic hurdles
  • Requires professionals to maintain updated digital profiles linked to a national ID

Overhaul of State Dental Councils

The new law mandates restructuring of state-level bodies:

  • State Dental Councils must be reconstituted within one year
  • Deadline set for March 2027
  • Failure to comply may lead to loss of authority

Existing councils will continue handling registrations and renewals during the transition.


New Grievance Redressal System

The reform also introduces a two-tier grievance system:

  • State Councils will handle initial complaints
  • A national appellate mechanism will address serious cases, including:
    • Medical negligence
    • Ethical violations

This aims to ensure greater transparency and accountability.


Major Reform in Dental Education and Practice

The introduction of the National Dental Commission marks a significant step towards:

  • Standardising dental education
  • Enhancing affordability
  • Improving regulatory efficiency
  • Enabling ease of practice across India

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

spot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Rome Summit: Modi and Meloni Outline a Bold New Roadmap for India-Italy Relations at the Colosseum

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia...

Five Agreements Signed as PM Modi Strengthens India-Norway Partnership

During Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Norway, the...

India-Denmark Relations in Focus as PM Modi Meets Danish Counterpart in Oslo

On Tuesday, Modi met with Danish Prime Minister Mette...

Ambrane unveils India’s first Type-C rechargeable batteries under Reneo series

New Delhi: Ambrane has launched the first-of-its-kind Type-C rechargeable...