Hyderabad: Government doctors in Telangana called off a planned statewide strike on Friday, June 5, after Health Minister Damodar Raja Narasimha assured the Telangana Government Doctors Association (TGGDA) that their demands would be addressed.

The association had announced the agitation over alleged violations of government order (GO) 38, issued in April this year, which lays out structured, transparent guidelines for the transfer of government employees, including doctors. The order establishes mandatory transfer criteria, seniority rules, and prioritizes the spouse criterion. It is central to the distinction between sought-after urban postings and rural or peripheral ones.

The TGGDA president had said nearly 5,000 doctors would participate in the strike and that outpatient services would be suspended at major government hospitals across the state, including Osmania General Hospital, Gandhi Hospital, and others.

The association’s Central Executive Committee had also announced that no State Executive Committee office-bearers would submit transfer option forms until GO 38 was fully implemented.

Satisfied with government response: TGGDA

Following the minister’s intervention, the TGGDA said it was satisfied with the government’s response. The association sought transparent transfers under GO 38 for doctors who have completed four years of service, those with three-year priority status, and candidates in the zero-spouse category. It also asked that elected office-bearers of recognized associations be exempted from transfers.

With the minister giving a positive assurance on these demands, the TGGDA announced it was withdrawing all planned protest programs. Outpatient, inpatient, emergency services, and surgeries at all government hospitals across Telangana will continue without disruption, it said.

“Providing quality medical services to the public is our foremost responsibility,” the association said, adding that doctors would be fully available to patients.

Osmania General Hospital

Osmania General Hospital, located in Hyderabad, India, is one of the oldest and largest hospitals in the region, originally established in 1926 during the reign of the Nizam of Hyderabad. It was named after the last Nizam, Osman Ali Khan, and designed in a blend of Indo-Saracenic and Mughal architectural styles. The hospital has served as a major public healthcare institution for nearly a century, playing a vital role in medical education and treatment for the local population.

Gandhi Hospital

Gandhi Hospital, located in Hyderabad, India, was established in 1851 as the Afzal Gunj Hospital during the Nizam’s rule and was later renamed in honor of Mahatma Gandhi. It is one of the oldest and largest public hospitals in the region, serving as a major teaching hospital affiliated with the Gandhi Medical College. Today, it provides comprehensive healthcare services to a vast population, particularly those from underserved communities.