Friday, 30 December 2011

Fees for training

At the clinical skills centre we have set up at BMC, we have fixed some nominal charges for the courses. It is Rs. 1500=00 for a one day undergraduate course and Rs. 5000=00 for a 3 day postgraduate course. How did we fix this amount? We actually did a costing exercise before fixing this fee. We included the cost of consumables like sutures, suturing pads, the animal tissues that we buy, the honorarium we pay the mentors and the fixed cost of salaries to the 3 employees at the centre. We did not include capital costs as we have no loan to service - all the infrastructure came through donations and the space, electricity and water come gratis from BMC. As a gesture to BMC we reduced the cost to BMC students by 40% of the above mentioned amount for PGs and made the course free for UGs.
With this approach, the actual expenditure is about 2500=00 per day; but we kept it low because of assurances that the sutures and some props would be donated by the industry. With this fee structure we are self sufficient. Mind you, it still does not cover attrition; if any equipment conks out, we have raise donations again to replace it.
This long preamble is just to air the fact that practically everyone seems to think that the fee is too high and that we are trying to make a profit with this activity!! The university team objected; the college objected; I had one to one meetings, explaining the logic of costing and produced documentary evidence for the same. The fee was, in fact, fixed after getting clearances from these authorities.

Now the candidates are complaining!! They like the course very much, but say that the costs are high!!

How do I explain the following?

  • The cost of  similar courses abroad runs into hundreds of pounds and dollars? Perhaps 10-15 times more expensive than the costs here.
  • Somebody has to pay for the actuals - there are no free lunches in this world!!
  • Unless we are self sufficient, we may not be able to survive and continue the training; depending on donations for everything is incorrect.
  • knowledge and skill learning is an investment which fetches huge returns.
I would love your inputs on this issue.

Monday, 19 December 2011

kl-first-blog

It is  a bit surprising that this is my first blog!!
I have been using computers for the last 30 years!! I have always been very active in propagating its use in medicine. I have conducted workshops, given lectures about computers and have been an 'activist' in pushing computers among doctors.
But then, why did I not take to blogging?
The reason is simple - I did not believe that I had something very important to say to the world at large; what I needed to say was to the immediate world around me - my family, my students and mt colleagues - and for this I did not need to blog!
Does that mean that I have something very important to say to the world now?? Certainly not!!
But then the pulls and pushes of social networking are so strong that it is probably prudent to have a blog to say what you have to say; perhaps link this to a social networking site so that your 'network' at large gets information that you might want to convey.
There is another important reason; several of our activities from the alumni association of BMC have to reach a larger audience; very few people log on to our website; perhaps we can reach them better through networking.
let us see how this works; so long for now.