The Indian allied healthcare sector is undergoing a transition driven by two regulatory frameworks from the National Commission for Allied and Healthcare Professions (NCAHP). The February 2026 document, titled ‘The Autonomous Boards Regulations’, defines the academic standards and entry requirements for students. The June 2026 document, titled, ‘The Registered Allied and Healthcare Professionals (Professional Conduct & Ethics) Regulations’, governs the conduct of practitioners.(Sign up for THEdge, The Hindu’s weekly education newsletter.)The focus on PsychologyWhile the National Commission for Allied and Healthcare Professions (NCAHP) governs 56 distinct professions—including nutrition, medical laboratory technology, physiotherapy, and anesthesia technology—the public discussion has centered heavily on psychology.According to the research paper titled ‘Psychology education in India faces fragmented regulation and overlapping curricula’, unlike other allied health fields, psychology faces a unique regulatory divide. Clinical psychology is governed by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment through the Rehabilitation Council of India (RCI), while other branches of psychology are governed by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare through the NCAHP. This “regulatory fragmentation” and the lack of a single, independent body for psychology have created significant uncertainty for students and practitioners regarding career pathways and professional identity.The regulatory framework organises various professions into specific categories. Clinical psychologists require the completion of approved clinical training programs to practice. Counsellors, including those in applied psychology and behavioural health, fall under the behavioural health vertical and must hold qualifications that adhere to the new academic curriculum. Non-clinical and integrated health workers, such as medical laboratory technicians and nutritionists, are governed by the competency standards assigned to their respective disciplines under the NCAHP Act.The broader regulatory landscapeBranches such as Nutrition and Dietetics, Medical Laboratory Sciences, and Operation Theatre Technology are also undergoing a significant regulatory overhaul. Like psychology, these fields are now required to adopt standardised, competency-based curricula and adhere to mandatory clinical hour requirements.The NCAHP Act, 2021, and the subsequent implementation of these standards in 2026, represent a uniform shift toward quality control across all allied health sectors. While the psychology community is navigating these changes in the public spotlight, every allied healthcare professional in India is now transitioning to a system defined by national registration, standardised training, and a unified ethical code. This process aims to bridge the long-standing gaps in educational quality and clinical exposure that have persisted across the allied health ecosystem for decadesThe student perspectiveFor many students, the first sign of this shift was the notification regarding educational qualifications. Anjali, a student who recently completed a master’s degree through an open-learning program, expressed uncertainty regarding her career. “What am I supposed to do now?” she asked. “Go back and do a regular Bachelors, then regular Masters, then regular Ph.D.? Just to be called a psychologist?”This uncertainty stems from the commission’s position against distance education. Their stance is that clinical skills require full-time, supervised training. However, practitioners caught in this transition describe the enforcement as sudden. When the initial draft was circulated, one student pointed out, “The premise of the whole act is to create more Mental Health Professionals. With the new enactment, there won’t be one for the next 5-7 years.”The title crisisThese regulations establish titles like “psychologist” and “counsellor” as protected labels, requiring a long, full-time path of study. Practitioners who already hold degrees often feel the new requirements disregard their existing experience. G. Rahul, a practitioner, remarked on the confusion regarding professional titles, “What’s this MA. You’ll have to explain to people. I have a double Masters degree, one is RCI degree and the other is not. There’s no clear demarcation in degree names”. This lack of clarity forces practitioners to justify their credentials to potential employers and patients.Rahul’s frustration stems from a lack of clear labeling in the new system. Essentially, a student could spend two years earning a high-quality Master’s degree from a top-tier state university, only to find that it does not meet the specific criteria set by the Commission. Because the new rules don’t clearly distinguish between these ‘standard’ degrees and the new ‘Commission-approved’ ones, professionals like Rahul are forced to explain the difference to every potential employer or patient. They are effectively being forced to obtain a ‘second’ Master’s degree that carries the government’s stamp of approval, even if they already possess the clinical knowledge.To Rahul, it feels like the system is ignoring his existing expertise and forcing him to start over just to get a specific label on his diploma.The 3,600 hours’ debateAccording to the research paper, the NCAHP Act (2021) explicitly governs diploma and undergraduate programs, leaving postgraduate programs (like M.A./M.Sc. in Psychology) in a “regulatory vacuum”.The debate also involves differing opinions on what constitutes a professional. A first-year Master’s Degree student, Amir Malik, who moved into psychology after a degree in engineering, argued that a master’s degree is designed to cover the basics anyway. He shared his opinion on the matter, “When I do masters Psych, say Cognitive Psychology, I am automatically made to go through the bachelors level stuff of it. Nobody can start from level 5 by itself. A higher degree subsumes the knowledge of the lower degree. Perhaps that’s what helped me absorb a higher level degree straightaway. So intellectually speaking, I deserve it more than an arts student, plus a BA pass.”Others maintain that practical experience is the primary measure of competency. An Undergraduate student, Saanvi Vijayakumar, a critic of the rules, stated: “The ingredient is empathy. Anybody who clocks 3,000–4,000 hours will get good at handling patients, won’t they?” Vikram Vidyarthi, another student compared this to international standards: “In the United States, the most gruelling licensing process doesn’t require a BA+MA+Ph.D. They just need a master’s degree+licensing hours.”The student’s confusionFor students entering the field, the pressure to secure a clear career path is high. Tanvi Hegade, a Second Year Under Graduate student, interested in clinical psychology requested guidance, stating, “I am very much interested in psychopathology, so I would want to go for M.A. Clinical Psychology. But again it’s very difficult to get in and I don’t think I would be able to go for a Ph.D.”A senior practitioner weighing Tanvi’s options said, “Then to be a psychologist you have to go all the way to Ph.D. To be a clinical psychologist, you can do an MA in clinical after this. RCI barely has 200 seats across India - so it’ll be very hard to get in. Yeah, try your best. Start doing MCQs already. Also figure out an alternative plan (other than RCI). Think about it for once.”The practical execution of the 3,600-hour clinical mandate is also reshaping the timeline of education. While the regulation does not always use the term ‘internship,’ it necessitates a move toward integrated clinical training that runs parallel to academic study. For many institutions, this requirement is effectively extending the duration of courses, as students are now required to complete extensive, supervised clinical postings in hospital settings to fulfill their mandatory hours. This has created significant logistical hurdles for colleges, many of which are struggling to secure the clinical infrastructure needed to support their entire student body.Transparency & the new ‘teeth’Beyond the classroom, the new rules change the daily operations of professionals. The regulations now require practitioners to display registration numbers and qualification details in their workspaces and to provide cost estimates to patients. The disciplinary system allows for formal patient complaints regarding unethical practices, such as the acceptance of referral commissions. Consequences for violations include warnings, fines, and the potential cancellation of registration. Furthermore, the commission has restricted the solicitation of patients and the use of unverified marketing claims on social media.Regarding the broader outlook for the sector, Nalin Saluja, founder of Virohan, noted in a recent Linkedin post that the Union Budget 2026–27 allocates ₹1,000 crore to expand the healthcare workforce by 1.5 lakh professionals over five years. He characterised this as a shift toward people-first healthcare. Mr. Saluja added that the impact of this investment depends on the integration of training with healthcare providers to ensure clinical exposure. He stated that allied health education can support job creation and improved care access if the execution is effective.