Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change

This paper looks at the treatment seeking behaviour of rural households and presents factors that discourage them from using public health facilities. It also brings out how Allopathic medical graduates as well as institutionally qualified AYUSH doctors predominantly offer services in cities and tow...

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Main Authors: Shailaja Chandra, Kishor Patwardhan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-04-01
Series:Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0975947618303486
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spelling doaj-c4e63eb60a5a4ad9af9d14ef5c14048e2020-11-25T01:40:59ZengElsevierJournal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine0975-94762018-04-0192143150Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for changeShailaja Chandra0Kishor Patwardhan1Former Secretary, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, New Delhi, India; Corresponding authorDepartment of Kriya Sharir, Faculty of Ayurveda, Institute of Medical Sciences, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, UP 221005, IndiaThis paper looks at the treatment seeking behaviour of rural households and presents factors that discourage them from using public health facilities. It also brings out how Allopathic medical graduates as well as institutionally qualified AYUSH doctors predominantly offer services in cities and townships which results in lakhs of village households having to depend on unqualified medical practitioners as the first line of medical treatment; also how this situation will continue unless the approach to providing medical treatment is modified. Continued dependence on unqualified practitioners is fraught with dangers of incorrect diagnosis, irrational drug use, resulting in the spread of multi-drug resistance. The reality that surrounds Allopathic practice by AYUSH doctors has also been described along with the educational underpinnings of accepting this approach.We opine that existing state policies that legitimise Allopathic practice by non-Allopathic practitioners do not help the rural poor to access proper medical treatment for acute conditions. Also, it does not enhance the credibility of the indigenous systems of medicine among which Ayurveda is the dominant system. First, we position our views in the context of the recently introduced National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill 2017 and provisions which call for the assessment of the need for human resources for health and building a road map to achieve the same. Second, we advocate re-inventing the pre-independence system of trained medical auxiliaries enrolled on a new schedule of the respective state medical register, authorised to give immediate medical treatment and making informed referrals for further diagnosis or specialised treatment. Finally, we recommend reinforcing the AYUSH systems to tackle emerging non-communicable diseases which are affecting all population cohorts adversely and, in whose prevention and management, the AYUSH systems are reported to possess special skills and competence. Keywords: Health workforce, Rural India, Unqualified practitionershttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0975947618303486
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shailaja Chandra
Kishor Patwardhan
spellingShingle Shailaja Chandra
Kishor Patwardhan
Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change
Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
author_facet Shailaja Chandra
Kishor Patwardhan
author_sort Shailaja Chandra
title Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change
title_short Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change
title_full Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change
title_fullStr Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change
title_full_unstemmed Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India – a prescription for change
title_sort allopathic, ayush and informal medical practitioners in rural india – a prescription for change
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
issn 0975-9476
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This paper looks at the treatment seeking behaviour of rural households and presents factors that discourage them from using public health facilities. It also brings out how Allopathic medical graduates as well as institutionally qualified AYUSH doctors predominantly offer services in cities and townships which results in lakhs of village households having to depend on unqualified medical practitioners as the first line of medical treatment; also how this situation will continue unless the approach to providing medical treatment is modified. Continued dependence on unqualified practitioners is fraught with dangers of incorrect diagnosis, irrational drug use, resulting in the spread of multi-drug resistance. The reality that surrounds Allopathic practice by AYUSH doctors has also been described along with the educational underpinnings of accepting this approach.We opine that existing state policies that legitimise Allopathic practice by non-Allopathic practitioners do not help the rural poor to access proper medical treatment for acute conditions. Also, it does not enhance the credibility of the indigenous systems of medicine among which Ayurveda is the dominant system. First, we position our views in the context of the recently introduced National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill 2017 and provisions which call for the assessment of the need for human resources for health and building a road map to achieve the same. Second, we advocate re-inventing the pre-independence system of trained medical auxiliaries enrolled on a new schedule of the respective state medical register, authorised to give immediate medical treatment and making informed referrals for further diagnosis or specialised treatment. Finally, we recommend reinforcing the AYUSH systems to tackle emerging non-communicable diseases which are affecting all population cohorts adversely and, in whose prevention and management, the AYUSH systems are reported to possess special skills and competence. Keywords: Health workforce, Rural India, Unqualified practitioners
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0975947618303486
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