Jaipur: Population doctors, who attacked across the state on Monday night, stated that their remote state attacks would continue indefinitely until the government fulfilled their demands on Tuesday.
Doctors have not shown signs of calling strikes despite holding talks with the Department of Medical Education until late at night.
They have asked the state government to provide positive answers and guarantees for their demands.
“We have protested for the past 10 days.
We have submitted eight points to the state government.
The government said that our demands were legitimate.
But they have not provided guarantees.
Our strike will continue.
Every time they call, we are ready for talks,” said a nervous doctor.
They accused that the hospital was a short staff and they had been burdened with work as a new batch of doctors, who were waiting for the Neet-PG counseling to start, have not joined.
Only the doctor lived the second year and the third year that worked now, they said.
The first year batch has not joined and the doctors worked with 66% of the workforce for the past six months.
NEET-PG has been postponed due to problems related to reservations in the Supreme Court.
So, counseling for Neet-Pg has not yet begun.
Since the last year’s students left six months ago, they had to take additional workloads.
The doctors also demanded three increases instead of two given today.
They also demand the deadline for sending theses, posters and paper presentations to be extended from December 31 to March 31 next year.
They also want senior founding seats to increase.
Although a meeting held with the medical education department continued until late at night on Tuesday night, the talks failed and the doctors decided to continue their unlimited attack.
Reacting to protests, Health Minister Parsadi Lal Meena said that he had written to the center to help solve their problems related to Neet-PG.
The reservation problem is in the Supreme Court and the sub-stitch, he said.
“The demands of population doctors are associated with the center and we have written to the Ministry of Health to see it.
There are no demands related to the state government,” Meena told Toi.
Doctors are also angry with the state government to be assigned to do “documents” and ensure that patients receive treatment under the Chiranjivi insurance scheme.