ID :
245749
Sat, 06/30/2012 - 11:59
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https://www.oananews.org//node/245749
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India's Healthcare Industry Faces Serious Challenges
NEW DELHI, June 30 (Bernama) – India’s health-care industry faces serious
challenge with poor health indicators, high mortality rates, scarcity of doctors
and nurses as well as perception of deteriorating quality of medical education,
Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh said.
“We face serious challenges in assuring the health and well-being of our
people. Our health indicators continue to be poor and high mortality rates of
infants and pregnant women have been a cause of serious concern,” he said.
The scarcity of doctors, nurses, health workers, public health professionals
is emerging as one of the most important impediments to providing universal
health coverage for all, he said at in his address at the third Convocation in
Jawaharlal Institute of Post graduate Medical Education and Research on Saturday
in Puducherry.
This shortage is acute in our rural areas and in particular, in the
northern, central and eastern regions of the country.
“Against a desirable rate of 1 doctor per 1,000 population we have one
doctor per 2,000 people. Against a norm of 3 nurses per doctor, we have 3 nurses
for every 2 doctors.”
The centre and the state governments, particularly state governments of the
under-served regions, need to put their heads together, prepare strategies and
implement urgent measures to remedy the situation, he said.
The quality of medical education is another concern, he said, adding that
there is a perception of deteriorating quality.
“We cannot allow this situation to continue or to persist. We must put in
place a credible regulatory and institutional mechanism to help develop
standards in our medical education.”
The need to be a serious re-look at the curriculum for medical education so
that doctors are trained to look at health in a truly holistic manner, and that
it goes beyond a narrow clinical and technology-driven approach.
“Students training to be doctors have to be prepared to work with local
communities and in our villages. They should be sensitised to the social
determinants of health and be as willing to contribute to preventive healthcare
and its management as the more lucrative curative systems.”
As science and society evolve rapidly in the 21st century, the education of
health professionals too must be transformed in precept and practice.
Interdisciplinary learning and health system connectivity should, therefore,
become the hallmarks of contemporary medical education, he stressed.
-- BERNAMA