when the cost becomes the gatekeeper to the medical college, it ultimately risks the passion and potential. True progression lies in prioritizing equality before privilege, where affordability gears up diversity, and talent, not revenue, rebound the hearts and minds that reshapes future of the Healthacare.
Thatâs a really important question @Shagufta.
Honestly, the high fees in private medical colleges can be overwhelming for many families. While the quality of education may be good but not everyone can afford it and that creates a big gap in opportunities.
One of the biggest challenges is the financial pressure it puts on studentsâloans, family stress and the constant worry of repayment. It can also affect mental health and career choices later on.
Medical education should be more accessible because the goal is to create good doctors not just expensive degrees.
The private med colleges fee are the real challenge now by talking fee in the name of funds, management etc. And on the other side they didnât give promise for giving a good placement.
I think for those colleges who give facilities to students fees is worth.
some of the colleges had not much facilities, no staff, not a proper classrooms the fees is not worth.
The exorbitant fee in private colleges is not worth it. As Indians, we think medical education is a sacred field and itâs the one profession that most Indian parents willing their kids to pursue the hype and the status, as evidenced by this exorbitant fee.
It relies on your personal aspirations, financial capacity, and the standard of the institution.
The exorbitant fees in private medical colleges often arenât justified, especially when quality doesnât match the cost. They create a huge financial burden, limiting access for deserving students. Financing medical education becomes a major challenge due to limited scholarships, high interest loans, and pressure on familiesâmaking it more about affordability than merit.