AYUSH Counselling: Open school, private students eligible for BHMS
Musab Qazi | January 8, 2025 | 05:23 PM IST | 2 mins read
The new regulations for the undergraduate Homeopathy degree course add Biotechnology to the list of subjects, increase emphasis on core subjects and change evaluation processes.
Download the NEET 2026 Free Mock Test PDF with detailed solutions. Practice real exam-style questions, analyze your performance, and enhance your preparation.
Download EBookNEW DELHI: Medical aspirants can now seek admission to the Bachelor of Homoeopathic Medicine and Surgery (BHMS) course even if they studied in an open schooling system or took their board exams as private candidates. Plus, candidates who studied biotechnology in place of biology in Class 12 are also eligible.
The change in criteria for the undergraduate homoeopathy programme is among several changes notified by the central government to the National Commission for Homoeopathy (Homoeopathy Graduate Degree Course – Bachelor of Homoeopathic Medicine and Surgery (B.H.M.S.) Regulations of 2022.
These rules govern AYUSH counselling and admissions, academics, evaluation and internships at homeopathy colleges across the country.
BHMS Admission: Private candidates, syllabus
The Centre has also a clause that deemed open school and private candidates ineligible to pursue the discipline.
A new clause requiring the state and central admission authorities to share the information about students admitted to the programme to the National Commission for Homeopathy (NCH), the apex regulator of homeopathy education and profession set up in 2020, has been added to the original regulations.
The Centre has also brought a few changes to the BHMS syllabus, teaching and assessment norms. Even with a competency-based dynamic curriculum (CBDC) already in place in the homeopathy course, new rules require the Homeopathy Education Board to periodically prepare syllabi under the new framework.
The revised norms appear to put more emphasis on fundamental subjects at the expense of more specialised courses. The number of teaching hours for for homoeopathic materia medica and homeopathic philosophy subjects in the second year of BHMS have been increased from 180 to 250 each, while those for for pharmacology, surgery and gynecology and obstetrics have been reduced in the range of 36 to 58 hours.
BHMS Course: Exams
The rules now also clarify that if a student fails in either theory or practical exam, it'd be deemed as failure in the entire subject. They will have to repeat both the tests. It has also been elaborated that the university-level summative assessment at the end of each year would include the complete syllabus for the respective year.
Among other changes, a clause specifying the relative weightage for various parameters to evaluate learners in elective courses, such as innovation and depth of problem definition, extent of work undertaken, has been removed.
Plus, obtaining a provisional degree certificate from the university is no longer a prerequisite for joining Compulsory Rotatory Internship.
Homeopathy is one of the six alternative medicine disciplines in AYUSH – the others are Ayurveda , Yoga & Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Sowa Rigpa – and at the central level, admission is through counselling by the Ayush Admissions Central Counselling Committee (AACCC). States manage AYUSH counselling for their own colleges and seats.
Clarification: The original version of this story said that a minimum aggregate score of 50% in PCB was no longer a condition for admission to BHMS. This was incorrect and based on the language of the notified regulations. The relevant section in the new regulations is in the image given below. The error is regretted and has been fixed.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Analysis: What the new UGC regulations on recruitment mean for academics, from assistant professor to VC
Teachers say UGC’s new regulations will ‘dilute quality’, allow bias, curb autonomy, allow privatisation. What the draft rules say, what changes, and the likely impact on academia, from assistant professor to VC.
Shradha Chettri | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- ‘Bitter experience’: DU’s 4th-year students face sudden rule changes, limited options, teacher shortage
- Maharashtra NEET Counselling: Private medical college sues for institute-level admissions, NRI quota expansion
- Maharashtra NEET Counselling: Medical college ‘confined, forced’ him to retract fee complaint, says aspirant
- MahaDBT, CAP Integration: Maharashtra students to get scholarship approvals at admission, no renewals needed
- Maharashtra: 11,000 faculty posts lie vacant; Officials say governors, finance division at fault
- BTech Courses: AI, computer science fuel enrolment boom to 5-year high, but may soon kill jobs, say experts
- Lights fade at Calcutta University’s unique Department of Applied Optics and Photonics due to staff shortage
- CBSE Board Exam 2026: Two exams for Class 10 ‘exhausting’ for teachers, cause more anxiety for students
- In poll-bound Bihar, NEP is leaving university students with endless exams, but no results or classes
- Agriculture courses in enrolment crisis: 10 Maharashtra colleges shut, over half seats vacant in 44 institutes