Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin on Saturday (January 24, 2026) said that admission modalities for Allied and Health Care Courses (AHCs) fall within the jurisdiction of the State Government and that the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) should be kept out of these admissions.
In a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, he said that the decision of the National Commission for Allied and Health Care Professions (NCAHP) making NEET mandatory for admission to two undergraduate degree courses—Bachelor of Physiotherapy (BPT) and Bachelor of Occupational Therapy (BOT)—was a “hasty and ad hoc decision” with “multiple deleterious consequences”.
Tamil Nadu moves Supreme Court against President’s refusal to grant assent to anti-NEET Bill
Pointing out that Tamil Nadu had consistently opposed NEET for MBBS admissions and had repeatedly cautioned against the danger of its extension to other courses, he said the State’s worst apprehensions had now come true.
“It is evident from recent communications from the Union Health Ministry that NEET is being prescribed for these two courses as the first step in a larger plan to make it mandatory for all Allied and Health Care Courses in the future. This attempt, being made without due consultation with State Governments—who are constitutionally responsible for both the health and education sectors—is totally unacceptable to us,” he said.






