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Bangladesh, hub of medical studies in Asia

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Bangladesh, hub of medical studies in Asia
Mamun Abdullah
  • Published at 11:17 am July 7th, 2021
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Affordable yet quality education offered by the country attracts foreigners who aspire to become doctors and serve people
Over the years Bangladesh has emerged as one of the preferred places for studying medicine owing to the quality education it provides at an affordable price.

This aspect draws thousands of international students, including many from neighbouring India, to Bangladesh every year when studying medicine is getting increasingly expensive in Europe, North America and other places in Asia.

Every year many students from India, Afghanistan, Bhutan, Pakistan, Maldives, Nepal, Sri Lanka, China, Russia and some African nations get admitted to both public and private medical colleges in Bangladesh, which offer high yet affordable standards of education.

As many as 200 seats are reserved for foreign candidates in the government medical colleges of Bangladesh, while 45% of seats in the private ones can be filled by non-native students.

Indians account for most of the international candidates, who come in droves to Bangladesh for its globally recognized medical degree, low tuition fees and better opportunities for internships at renowned medical and research centres of the world as compared to many other countries.

Speaking to Dhaka Tribune, several foreign students said the quality of medical studies in Bangladesh was similar to that of India — not only in terms of syllabi but also books, teaching methods and duration of the study.

Some of the Indian students said they were not in favour of going to the US or European countries to pursue a medical degree, being discouraged by the substantially higher tuition fees. Getting an MBBS degree in Bangladesh was much more affordable in comparison, they noted.

Not including the 2020-2021 academic session, some 5,000 Indians are currently studying at the 68 public and private medical colleges in Bangladesh, according to the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).

This year, around 700 Indian students were selected for enrolment in Bangladeshi medical colleges while almost 800 qualified for internships.

DGHS Director (Medical Education) Dr AKM Ahsan Habib said the Indian students got the opportunity to do their internships at the medical colleges concerned after obtaining permission from the Bangladesh Medical and Dental Council (BMDC).

“Bangladeshi medical students also get the chance to do internships at Indian hospitals under a bilateral agreement between two countries," he added.

Why do Indians opt for studying medicine in Bangladesh?

Bangladesh attracts a large number of students from several Indian states, including West Bengal, Jammu and Kashmir, Kerala, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Karnataka, Tripura and Manipur, and the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir each year.

Explaining why he chose to study in Bangladesh, a Maharashtra native studying at Dhaka Community Medical College Hospital said: “Bangladesh is geographically and culturally very similar to India.

“Moreover, my parents can easily contact me anytime they want, which is another advantage.”
Another Indian, who studies medicine at MH Samorita Hospital and Medical College, said: “One has to spend more than $100,000 for an MBBS degree in India, which is very expensive. We can get the same quality of education in Bangladesh and it only costs around $45,000-$50,000.”

Being a Muslim-majority country also makes Bangladesh popular among Kashmiri students, according to Munawar Abbas, who is pursuing his medical degree at Dhaka National Medical College.

Kashmiri students were quite familiar with the culture of Bangladesh because of the overlapping Islamic traditions, he said, adding: “The quality of education here is also up to the mark while being affordable for middle-class families.”

A native of Kolkata, Gita Joy Raj said Indian students trained in Bangladesh frequently did well in the entrance exam of the Medical Council of India (MCI), a test for Indians who completed their medical studies abroad.

“Many Indian students favour Bangladeshi medical colleges as they do not require a NEET (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test) score, which is compulsory in India because of the limited number of seats against the huge number of applicants,” she stated.

“Another factor is the tuition fee, which is much higher in India. Besides, Indian parents prefer Bangladesh for children’s higher studies as it is so close to home,” Gita noted.

Some Indian students currently doing their internship in Bangladesh said they had chosen to study in Bangladesh as the country’s MBBS degree and internship certificate were well-regarded by the MCI.

“The worth of an MBBS degree from Bangladesh is the same as one obtained in India. We still need to sit for the mandatory Foreign Medical Graduates Examination (FMGE) screening test, but those who get their MBBS from Bangladeshi medical colleges usually clear it in one go,” one of them said.

However, despite being in demand, the medical colleges, private ones in particular, needed to upgrade their facilities to be more appealing to foreign students, DGHS Deputy Program Manager (Medical Education) Dr Khandoker Mynul Hasan opined.

Studies hampered, students frustrated
Hundreds of Indian students, who have yet to complete their medical studies in Bangladesh, are currently stuck in their home country due to the pandemic situation.

They said they desperately wanted to return to Bangladesh, mostly to finish their internships, but were unable to do so owing to the closure of the border and suspension of air travel between the two countries.

The Bangladesh government had yet to permit them to enter the country and the Indian embassy did not take any measures in this regard either, some of the students stuck at home told Dhaka Tribune.

“We have already lost a year or so [due to the pandemic] and the delay in our internships is only adding to our woes,” said one distressed student.

 
seriously you ought to be graduating more Bangladeshis
 
it's a pretty good revenue stream to subsidize domestic students.

There is no subsidy for domestic Bangladeshi students, unless they are minorities (Hindu, Christian or tribals) and can command educational quotas. Not sure if there are scholarships either for local Muslim students.


Lower cost of education is one thing, but this is the crux of the reason why Bangladesh gets foreign students,

A native of Kolkata, Gita Joy Raj said Indian students trained in Bangladesh frequently did well in the entrance exam of the Medical Council of India (MCI), a test for Indians who completed their medical studies abroad.
IMHO - we should make written and spoken Bengali a requirement for these foreign students. And classes should at least partly be taught in Bangladeshi Bengali.

This is to foster goodwill for Bangladesh when they go back home to their native countries.
 
There is no subsidy for domestic Bangladeshi students, unless they are minorities (Hindu, Christian or tribals) and can command educational quotas. Not sure if there are scholarships either for local Muslim students.
There may not be any direct subsidies for our local students. But, when foreign students are enrolled their tuition fees help the overall costs of education to go down.

So, in the present case, the cost of educating a local student automatically goes down.

Also, please note that higher education costs are not solely borne by the parents. There is a big percentage of govt funds. At least it was before. Now, because there are many more solvent parents who can cover the cost of higher tuition fees, therefore, the govt subsidies must have decreased.
 
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IMHO - we should make written and spoken Bengali a requirement for these foreign students. And classes should at least partly be taught in Bangladeshi Bengali.

This is to foster goodwill for Bangladesh when they go back home to their native countries.
Do you know people,especially non Bangla in Tripura dump school and colleges that uses Bengali as medium of instruction?
Do u know no college in India can attract students from other state if it uses local medium to teach ?
If your Korea,Japan or China is one thing in Asia,foreigners aren't wasting their time learning Bengali,a language which has no softpower appeal or any use.
For comparison 21K Indian study MBBS in China,I got my cousin admitted in a college in China ,she learned Chinese on her own accord;usefulness and softpower appeal .The use of English is the primary reason South Asian nations has students studying across other south asian nations.
 
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IMHO - we should make written and spoken Bengali a requirement for these foreign students. And classes should at least partly be taught in Bangladeshi Bengali.

This is to foster goodwill for Bangladesh when they go back home to their native countries.
Do you know people,especially non Bangla in Tripura dump school and colleges that uses Bengali as medium of instruction?
Do u know no college in India can attract students from other state if it uses local medium to teach ?
If your Korea,Japan or China is one thing in Asia,foreigners aren't wasting their time learning Bengali,a language which has no softpower appeal or any use.
For comparison 21K Indian study MBBS in China,I got my cousin admitted in a college in China ,she learned Chinese on her own accord;usefulness and softpower appeal .The use of English is the primary reason South Asian nations has students studying across other south asian nations.
Most of them learn to speak Bangla anyway... specially the south asian ones...Bhutanese PM and FM were both students here..the PM speaks Bangla....the African students however find it more difficult to learn.
 
Most of them learn to speak Bangla anyway... specially the south asian ones...Bhutanese PM and FM were both students here..the PM speaks Bangla....the African students however find it more difficult to learn.
Bhutan was a piss poor nation with had no connection to outside back then,and was under semi embargo of India,they had no choice, recently they developed somewhat; taking some local tidbits is one thing but studying in a bangla is downright gross for many and uncomprehensible . Only some south Asian nations goes to Bangladesh to study medicine- the mention of Russia and China is very misleading ,they don't go to Bangladesh to study at all,Chinese and Russian has similar but cheaper option but of higher in quality.Only poor Indian /NEPALI study in Bangladesh ,other than few foreigners with absolutely free scholarship in the best university allocated for pisspoor from some other country outside south Asia .
 
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Don't understand the cost of medical studies has risen so high in India. In pvt. colleges it is understood, but even in some govt. colleges they are charging close to a lakh for 5 years course. Just 10 years ago it was just 10000 INR for entire 5 and half years plus the exam fee of 2000-3000 INR. I think the cost is still the same in top tier colleges like AIIMS, but govt. colleges have no right to charge this much money. Never met anyone yet who done MBBS from BD, would love to see how good they are. Have met students from russian , ukraine and even china, they are equally good as our students (those who are able to pass Foreign Medical Graduates Examination).
edit: fees are still low in most govt. colleges
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Another Indian, who studies medicine at MH Samorita Hospital and Medical College, said: “One has to spend more than $100,000 for an MBBS degree in India, which is very expensive. We can get the same quality of education in Bangladesh and it only costs around $45,000-$50,000.”

Now i wonder does even BD students have to pay 45000$ fees or it just private colleges in BD ? That's awful lot of money
 
Another Indian, who studies medicine at MH Samorita Hospital and Medical College, said: “One has to spend more than $100,000 for an MBBS degree in India, which is very expensive. We can get the same quality of education in Bangladesh and it only costs around $45,000-$50,000.”

Now i wonder does even BD students have to pay 45000$ fees or it just private colleges in BD ? That's awful lot of money

Why you thought all of us are beggars in Bangladesh? $45,000 (Tk.38 lakh) a year is nothing for tuition fees, in the private sector. Quite a large portion of business people can afford it. Medical education is expensive all over the world.
 
Why you thought all of us are beggars in Bangladesh? $45,000 (Tk.38 lakh) a year is nothing for tuition fees, in the private sector. Quite a large portion of business people can afford it. Medical education is expensive all over the world.
good for you than. how is the fee in govt. colleges ? Does it admit foreign students ?
 
good for you than. how is the fee in govt. colleges ? Does it admit foreign students ?

Private Universities do admit resident foreign students. NSU is a US-accredited University with US Curriculum which has high fees but not as high as medical colleges. However their teaching standards and facilities rival many 2nd tier US universities.

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NSU fees,

Note that Tk.7000 per credit mean per semester-hour which is a US system. Typically students will take 4 courses per semester and each course will have 3 credit hours, thereby the load will be 12 semester hours per semester. So per semester the academic fees (without additional/adjunct course fees) will be 12XTk.7000 which is Tk.84,000. With other fees, the fees will easily exceed Tk. 1 lakh per semester for local students.

The fees will be higher for foreign students. Here is their informational page for Int'l applicants.


NSU fees are considered rather reasonable. But to get into and remain at NSU, one needs to show and maintain at least a 3.5 on a perfect 4.0 GPA scale.

Among other higher standard private universities are East West University, BRAC University etc.

On the govt. side (public sector universities) I'm sure Dhaka University which is the best govt. University in Bangladesh, does admit foreign students too.

JahangirNagar University a few miles from Dhaka specializes in certain disciplines like medicine, bio-ecology, biology and environmental studies. There are regional universities too, closest to Assam (Meghalaya) would be Mymensingh University and Sylhet University, the latter has good research facilities. Too many to outline and describe.
 
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