Welcome to DigitexMedwire Research

Friends, we are so happy and excited to introduce our first ever blogging platform dedicated to Global healthcare industry. With global economy growing at 4% and world healthcare industry growing at an impressive rate of 17% annually, our team couldn’t manage a better time than now to share our knowledge tank with you people. Dear partners, friends, customers, well wishers and society in general, you can expect us bring you the best articles, write ups, news columns, reports and events update on cutting edge technologies and latest lifestyle trends in the Indian and International markets. This blog is an interim platform for leaders in making and leaders in practice who pursue ‘knowledge’ as their platform to success. This blog site is a product of DMSMedwire Research ‘knowledge sharing program’ and is a signature to our long term business expansion plans and corporate identity.

We wish all our fellow readers, best of luck. Happy Reading!

Monday, November 24, 2008

India's Healthcare Conundrum [Analysis]: Non-governance & curruption are preventing proper delivery


Anbumani Ramdoss, India's Health Minister, recently had occasion to highlight the vast gap in the medical workforce in the country. According to him, while the country had around 700,000 doctors, it needed 800,000 more to meet the standards of the World Health Organisation. He added that the country needed 1.5 million more nurses to achieve, as the Indian Planning Commission has indicated, the nurse-patient ration of 1:500.

In order to overcome the huge deficit, conditions for establishing medical colleges have been relaxed. Sensing an opportunity for making a killing, politicians, their financiers and other influential and powerful business interests have got into the act. Colleges have been and are being opened any and everywhere regardless of the availability or otherwise of the necessary faculty, equipment, patients and/or hospital-beds. Faculty members of distant institution are hired for few days to meet the needs of inspections, which, too, are rigged. Even fake patients are sometimes made to occupy, on payment, beds lying vacant in the attached hospitals.

A member of the Medical Council of India recently lamented the absence of accreditation of medical education in India, the efforts being concentrated more towards securing recognition. The main reason for this aberration, he said, was the "absence of sincerity and moral values in the society".


Training and education of nurses is no different. Because of shortage of a million nurses, to achieve the ratio of one nurse for every 500 patients colleges have been allowed to be opened with scant facilities of teaching and learning. Producing nurses possessing, at best, rudimentary theoretical awareness with little knowledge or training in clinical applications, such institutions are only fattening their promoters doing nothing for the country or for the noble profession. Only the institutions of excellence that the government proposes to open may redeem to a limited extent the ongoing compromise in the quality of nursing.

The proliferating diagnostic labs are also an area of huge concern. According to the Quality Council of India, although 70 percent of the modern medical care is based on diagnostic lab tests, 90 percent of medical laboratories have remained unregulated by any standard. Most of the pathological laboratories do not follow any quality benchmark for want of stringent requirements. Here again, accreditation (by government or other recognised agencies) is virtually absent and, hence, quality control is non-existent. Leave alone hygiene or sanitation, even sensitivity towards the need for a sterile ambience is absent. Qualified pathologists or radiologists are frequently unavailable. Inspections are unheard of and the entire system is governed by the hardly relevant Shops and Establishments Act.

Instead of tackling these vital issues, Ramdoss got into avoidable controversies. Besides, to benefit a party apparatchik he banned production of vaccines by public sector labs, causing their widespread shortage that continues to date.

He, however, successfully imposed a ban on smoking in public places. He is now poised to move into the areas of drugs and alcoholism. Ramdoss's strategy of mounting attacks on the lifestyle or habits or substances the pursuit and/or use of which cause deadly diseases necessitating heavy public investments for their treatment cannot but be appreciated.

India's healthcare is a conundrum that would need much more than mere tinkering. To take care of health of a billion people, mostly poor, the immediate need would seem to be ruthless governance and rooting out of the prevailing rampant corruption in the health sector. And, the country is now at such a stage when penalisation of the states, the main instruments of healthcare delivery, for non-performance by blocking off their funding seems to have become necessary.

Source: ohmynews.com Contributed by: DMSMedwire Research JSG Team

No comments: