1. What Is AETCOM?
AETCOM — Attitude, Ethics, and Communication — is a mandatory module in the NMC's CBME curriculum for MBBS. Introduced with the 2019 curriculum reform, it is the first time in Indian medical education history that professionalism, ethics, and communication skills have been formally taught, assessed, and documented as a requirement for the MBBS degree.
AETCOM runs across all three phases of MBBS — from the first month of Phase I through the end of Phase III Part 2. It is not a standalone subject. It is a longitudinal thread woven through the entire curriculum, reinforcing the idea that the attitudes and behaviours a doctor demonstrates are as clinically important as their knowledge of pharmacology or surgery.
Research consistently shows that most patient complaints arise from communication failure or perceived lack of empathy — not clinical error. AETCOM ensures Indian doctors are trained in these dimensions as rigorously as any other subject.
2. Why the NMC Made It Mandatory
The decision to make AETCOM a mandatory, assessed module was driven by several converging realities in Indian healthcare:
- Rising patient complaints: Consumer forums and medical councils across India reported a consistent pattern — the majority of complaints against doctors involved communication failures, not clinical errors.
- Declining patient trust: Surveys of patients across urban and rural India found declining trust in doctor-patient interactions, often attributed to rushed consultations and poor communication.
- Globalisation of medical careers: Indian doctors increasingly work in international settings where structured communication standards (informed consent, breaking bad news protocols, team communication) are non-negotiable.
- The implicit was insufficient: The old curriculum assumed that good attitude and professional behaviour would develop naturally through clinical exposure. Evidence showed this assumption was wrong — without explicit teaching and assessment, professionalism varied widely and unpredictably.
3. The 8 AETCOM Modules
The NMC has defined eight thematic modules that run progressively across all MBBS phases:
What It Means to Be a Doctor
Professional identity, the social contract of medicine, and the responsibilities of being an IMG.
The Doctor–Patient Relationship
Trust, empathy, cultural sensitivity, and the dynamics of clinical encounters in India's diverse healthcare landscape.
Medicine as a Profession
Codes of conduct, peer accountability, professional organisations, and the regulatory framework of Indian medicine.
Bioethics
Autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice — applied to real clinical scenarios including informed consent, end-of-life care, and resource allocation.
Communication
Verbal and non-verbal communication, history-taking, breaking bad news, counselling, and clinical documentation.
Human Rights and Medicine
Rights of patients, marginalised groups, and healthcare workers — including medico-legal responsibilities.
Research and Medicine
Research ethics, informed consent in research, publication standards, and evidence-based medicine principles.
Social Accountability
The doctor's role in public health, community medicine, health equity, and addressing India's social determinants of disease.
4. How AETCOM Is Taught
AETCOM is deliberately not taught through traditional lectures. The NMC mandates experiential, participatory methods that require students to reflect and respond — not merely absorb:
- Small group discussions (SGDs): Facilitated discussions of ethical dilemmas, case scenarios, and real clinical situations with 10-15 students per group.
- Role-plays: Structured scenarios where students practice breaking bad news, obtaining informed consent, or navigating a difficult consultation.
- Standardised patient encounters: Trained actors simulate patients with specific communication challenges — language barriers, grief, denial — allowing students to practice in a safe environment.
- Reflective writing: Students maintain portfolios with written reflections on clinical encounters, ethical challenges they observed, and their own developing professional identity.
- Case-based learning: Ethics cases drawn from real clinical situations in Indian healthcare settings.
5. How AETCOM Is Assessed
AETCOM assessment is one of the most distinctive features of the NMC CBME curriculum. Unlike traditional examinations, AETCOM is assessed through:
- Portfolio review: The student's reflective writing portfolio is reviewed at defined milestones. Faculty assess the depth of reflection, not just completion.
- Observed structured encounters: Faculty use standardised rubrics to assess communication and professional behaviour during role-plays and standardised patient encounters.
- Module completion sign-off: Each AETCOM module must be completed and signed off by the facilitating faculty member. Students who do not complete modules cannot progress to the next phase.
- Internal assessment contribution: AETCOM contributes to the internal assessment marks for relevant subjects across phases.
Students who fail to complete mandatory AETCOM modules are ineligible to sit for university examinations — regardless of their performance in other subjects. Tracking module completion is therefore a compliance-critical function for every medical college.
6. Implementation Challenges in 2026
Despite its importance, AETCOM implementation across India's 816 medical colleges remains uneven in 2026. The most common challenges are:
- Faculty facilitator shortage: Effective AETCOM facilitation requires trained faculty comfortable with participatory methods. Most faculty completed their own training under the lecture-dominant old curriculum.
- Time pressure: With a packed clinical and preclinical curriculum, AETCOM sessions are sometimes compressed or rescheduled, reducing their quality.
- Portfolio tracking at scale: Managing reflective portfolios for 150 students per batch across 8 modules and 4.5 years is operationally complex without digital infrastructure.
- Assessment subjectivity: The qualitative nature of AETCOM assessment is uncomfortable for faculty trained in objective marking. Standardised rubrics reduce — but do not eliminate — this challenge.
7. Digital AETCOM Tracking in 2026
Leading medical colleges are now using digital platforms to manage AETCOM documentation. The key capabilities of a robust digital AETCOM system include:
- Module-by-module completion tracking for every student with faculty sign-off timestamps
- Portfolio upload and management — students submit reflective essays and documents digitally
- HOD and department dashboards showing completion rates per phase and per module
- Automated exam eligibility alerts when a student has incomplete AETCOM modules before university examination cutoffs
- NMC inspection-ready reports showing AETCOM compliance across the entire batch
8. 2026 and Beyond — The Future of AETCOM
AETCOM is set to deepen in significance through 2026 and the years ahead. The NExT examination is expected to incorporate assessment of professional competencies — including communication — in its Step 2 clinical component. This means AETCOM is not just a curriculum requirement but a direct preparation for the licensing examination.
AI-assisted assessment of communication skills — using speech analysis and structured observation rubrics — is beginning to emerge in progressive medical education systems globally, and India's leading colleges are watching these developments closely. The doctor of 2030 will be assessed on communication and ethics with the same rigour as clinical knowledge.
EdMedAI tracks all 8 AETCOM modules across phases, manages faculty sign-offs, stores student portfolios, and generates NMC inspection-ready AETCOM completion reports. Request a demo →