A Benchmark is often portrayed as a tool that brings uniformity, enables fair assessment and helps institutions move toward measurable excellence, upholding public trust and value for merit. However, the recent decision by the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) to lower National Eligibility cum Entrance Test for Postgraduate cutoffs begged the question: Did the benefits balance out the consequences? For some, it seemed like an efficient move towards seat utilisation, while for others it was a short-term fix to system failure. The truth, like in most policy interventions, lies in each one’s perspective. A PRAGMATIC APPROACH: OPPORTUNITIES AND USE OF RESOURCES According to official NBEMS reports, the cutoffs for General/Economically Weaker Section candidates were lowered from the 50th to the 7th percentile, General–Persons with disabilities from the 45th to the 5th, and scheduled caste, scheduled tribe, and other backward classes categories from the 40th to the 0th percentile.1 The primary rationale for decreasing cutoffs was maximising seat occupancy. Vacant postgraduate seats are a concern when there is overwhelming load on the current workforce. Increasing allocation makes sure resources to train the next generation of specialists are put into perfect use. Experts also opine that performance in an examination cannot decide entirely how a person’s career should shape. Competence takes time to build and happens with hours of work done over several years and cannot be defined with a single assessment. Well-accomplished doctors assert that failing examinations in the past didn’t stop them from being any less competent, as they built themselves with years of clinical experience. CUTOFF ENIGMA – IS THERE DILUTION OF STANDARDS? Despite the favorable outcomes, critics caution that lowering cutoffs brings down standards overall. The credibility of conducting a national exam is lost. A workforce shortage arises from poor working conditions, expensive tuition, and the desire to get trained at a better institution. Unless these root causes are addressed, collapse is inevitable. Bringing the threshold down also affects how merit is viewed. For candidates who have dedicated their lives to training at elite institutions, it undermines the essence of hard work and perseverance. Patient safety becomes another major concern as incompetence is not just academic but impacts healthcare delivery. In such a setting with a very low margin for error, every decision in itself can be the gap between life and death. THE WAY FORWARD: ACHIEVING A MIDDLE GROUND To reduce cut-offs from dangling so much, addressing the root cause and bringing crude changes in the system are essential: increasing the number of merit-based admissions, introducing thresholds for privately administered seats, and improving work environments. If lowering cutoffs is inevitable, it should be supported by well-structured residency programmes and parallel amendments to reroute the system. Rather than avalanche reductions, a transparent, declared, range-based cutoff policy, adjusted for exam difficulty and seat availability, could strike a better balance. CONCLUSION Change is inevitable and uncomfortable in an already complex system. The effectiveness of these new implementations has to be objectively assessed by tracking long-term outcomes in patient care and training quality. A periodically reviewed approach should justify current proceedings. Though favourable outcomes exist, the disturbance in the community is real. Pragmatism is necessary, but not with the erosion of standards, and in the long term warrants scrutiny.
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Joseph John Srampickal
George Paul Panjikkaran Neeraj
Current Medical Issues
Christian Medical College, Vellore
Christian Medical College
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Srampickal et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8955f6c1944d70ce065cc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4103/cmi.cmi_31_26
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