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Dental Council of India

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dental Council of India
AbbreviationDCI
Formation1948; 76 years ago (1948)
TypeGovernment
PurposeTo regulate dental education in India and to grant Colleges, Universities, and also for registration of dental degree holders and monitoring dental practice.
HeadquartersNew Delhi
Location
  • Dental Council of India

    National Dental Commission Building, Plot No.14, Sector-9, R.K. Puram,

    New Delhi-110022
Official language
English and Hindi
President
Dr. Dibyendu Mazumdar
Main organ
Council
AffiliationsMinistry of Health and Family Welfare, India
Websitewww.dciindia.gov.in

The Dental Council of India was incorporated under The Dentists Act, 1948[1] to regulate dental education and the profession throughout India. It is financed by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and through the local state dental councils.

Objectives

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  • Maintain uniform standards of dental education in India
  • Regulate the curriculum in the training of dentists, dental hygienists and dental mechanics
  • Regulate the level of examinations and qualifications

Function

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The Dental Council of India is constituted by an act of parliament ‘The Dentists Act 1948’ (XVI of 1948) with a view to regulate the dental education, dental profession and dental ethics thereto-which came into existence in March 1949.

The Council is composed of 6 constituencies representing Central Government, State Government, Universities, Dental Colleges, Medical Council of India and the Private Practitioners of Dentistry. The Director-General of Health Services is Ex-Officio Member – both of the Executive Committee and General Body. The Council elects from themselves the President, Vice-President and the members of the Executive Committee. The elected President and the Vice-President are the Ex-Officio Chairman and Vice Chairman of the Executive Committee. The Executive Committee is the governing body of this organisation, which deals with all procedural, financial and day-to-day activities and affairs of the Council. The Council is financed mainly by grants from the Govt. of India, Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (Deptt. of Health) though the other source of income of the Council is the 1/4th share of fees realised every year by various State Dental Councils under section 53 of the Dentists Act, Inspection fee from the various Dental Institution for Inspecting under Section 15 of the Dentists Act, 1948 and application fee from the organisation to apply for permission to set up new Dental College, opening of higher Courses of study and increase of admission capacity in Dental Colleges under section 10A of the Dentists Act, 1948 as amended by the Dentists (Amendment) Act, 1993.

Future

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A Bill has been introduced in the Parliament of India to dissolve the Dental Council of India, along with other Regulatory Bodies such as the Medical Council of India, Nursing Council of India and Pharmacy Council of India.[2] In January 2020, the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare put in the public domain the draft National Dental commission Bill, a bill aimed at replacing the Dental Council of India and replacing it with National Dental Commission. These Regulatory Bodies are proposed to be replaced with a common Statutory Body known as National Commission for Human Resources for Health. This is primarily due to widespread allegations of corruption in the Dental Council of India,[3] and raids conducted by Central Bureau of Investigation on Anil Kohli, tainted ex-President of Dental Council of India[4] and Ketan Desai, tainted ex-President of Medical Council of India.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "THE DENTISTS ACT, 1948" (PDF). Government of India. 1948. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 April 2009. Retrieved 20 April 2012.
  2. ^ "No dissolution of Medical Council of India". The Hindu. 7 May 2012. Retrieved 2 June 2016.
  3. ^ "CBI arrests Dental Council of India member, recovers Rs. 75 lakh". NDTV. 18 January 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  4. ^ "CBI raids ex-president of Dental Council". Zee News. 23 September 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  5. ^ "Ketan Desai, tainted ex-chief of MCI, is now president of World Medical Association". India Today. 21 October 2016. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
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