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Sweat, Fainting, and Rs 6,195: The Harsh Reality Inside Noida’s FMGE Centre

6,195 Exam Fee, Zero Ventilation: Medical Body Flags Poor Conditions At Noida FMGE Centre

By Priya NairPublished 7 July 2026· 2 min read
Sweat, Fainting, and Rs 6,195: The Harsh Reality Inside Noida’s FMGE Centre
Sweat, Fainting, and Rs 6,195: The Harsh Reality Inside Noida’s FMGE Centre

Medical aspirants faced grueling conditions at a Noida examination centre, sparking outrage over the lack of basic infrastructure despite a hefty exam fee.

The Foreign Medical Graduate Examination (FMGE) is intended to test the clinical knowledge of future doctors, but for those appearing at a centre in Noida’s Sector 62, the test became a battle for physical endurance. Candidates were locked inside the venue for seven to eight hours, forced to navigate an examination under 40-degree Celsius heat. With non-functional air conditioning and zero ventilation, the situation turned dire, leading to reports of students feeling dizzy and even fainting while attempting the paper.

A Systemic Failure of Infrastructure

The Federation of All India Medical Commission (FAIMA) has been quick to flag the poor conditions at the Noida FMGE centre, calling the experience "unacceptable." For a steep exam fee of Rs 6,195, candidates expected a professional, climate-controlled environment conducive to high-stakes testing. Instead, they were met with a setup that FAIMA described as a health hazard, publicly stating that "future doctors are not endurance athletes."

Video footage circulating from the site captures the distress of candidates who emerged from the building visibly exhausted. The incident has turned the spotlight onto the logistics of conducting large-scale medical assessments in India’s sweltering summer. While the focus of many candidates currently remains on the upcoming fmge result 2026, the discourse has rapidly shifted toward the crumbling state of basic infrastructure at examination venues.

Why It Matters

This isn't just about a malfunctioning AC unit; it highlights a recurring pattern of neglect in the management of high-stakes competitive exams. When students pay a significant sum to be evaluated, the burden of providing a safe, humane testing environment rests entirely on the authorities. By failing to ensure basic ventilation, the organisers have compromised the health and focus of medical professionals-in-waiting.

The broader context is equally troubling. This report comes on the heels of FAIMA’s recent protest regarding the scarcity of internship seats for Foreign Medical Graduates, citing budgetary constraints in medical colleges. Whether it is the lack of clinical training berths or the indignity of writing exams in suffocating heat, the medical education ecosystem is showing signs of severe administrative strain. Accountability for these lapses is now the primary demand from the medical fraternity, who argue that student safety can no longer be treated as an optional variable.

By Priya Nair
Political Correspondent

Priya Nair covers parties, elections and the business of power for PoliticalPedia.