The NEET PG 2024 was scheduled to be held on July 7; now it will be conducted on June 23.
The National Medical Commission (NMC) has revised the examination date of the National Eligibility Entrance Test (Postgraduate). The NEET PG 2024 was scheduled to be held on July 7; now it will be conducted on June 23. The cut-off date for the purpose of eligibility to appear in the NEET PG 2024 will remain unchanged at August 15, 2024, the notice said. Following this sudden change in the NEET PG 2024 examination dates, students were left puzzled and disappointed.
Sharing a post on X, a user wrote,”Preponing the exam is worse than postponing it ! Policy makers might not care about it, but it impacts the futures of thousands of doctors ! #NEETPG.” As per the revised schedule, the NEET PG result will be announced by July 15, while the counselling for admission will be held from August 5 to October 15. The new academic session will start on September 16 and the last date of joining would be October 21.
The decision was taken during a meeting held by the Post Graduate Medical Education Board (PGMEB) of the National Medical Commission with Medical Counselling Committee, Directorate General for Health Sciences and National Board of Examinations for Medical Sciences, a public notice said.
Not happy with the revised NEET PG exam dates, a user wrote,”we should file petition against this ,it has disturbed studies and arrangements for many students,it needs to be 7 july only.”
we should file petition against this ,it has disturbed studies and arrangements for many students,it needs to be 7 july only.
— Saral Bhasha (@Mamta46518) March 20, 2024
“We should tag pmo and other important persons and say our problem,if we tweet in large numbers, then they will listen, it’s matter of our career🙏🙏 everybody oppose this preponement and playing with careers,” wrote another user.
Puzzled with the NMC’s decision, All India Students’ Dental Association wrote,” The #NMC initially scheduled the #NEETPG2024 exam in July to accommodate more students, a decision we endorsed. This brought relief to students. However, the sudden rescheduling to June caused distress among students leaving us puzzled about reasons behind these frequent changes.”