Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030

Background: The current belief of availability of doctors in India is based on the registration stock of doctors accumulated since the early 20th century. This has not been adjusted to attrition of the strength occurring due to retirement, emigration, etc. Objectives: To estimate the number of pract...

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Main Author: Basant Potnuru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2017-01-01
Series:Indian Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijph.in/article.asp?issn=0019-557X;year=2017;volume=61;issue=3;spage=182;epage=187;aulast=Potnuru
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spelling doaj-fd04d0e010be46bb9fe9736fbc3dd8f82020-11-25T00:26:39ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Public Health0019-557X2017-01-0161318218710.4103/ijph.IJPH_143_16Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030Basant PotnuruBackground: The current belief of availability of doctors in India is based on the registration stock of doctors accumulated since the early 20th century. This has not been adjusted to attrition of the strength occurring due to retirement, emigration, etc. Objectives: To estimate the number of practicing doctors currently available in India and will be available in 2030 after adjustments made for attrition of the stock. Methods: The paper used Medical Council of India's historical data (1960–2015) on registration stock of doctors obtained from the Indian medical registers available on its website and other data on emigration of doctors accessed from Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and destination country sources. Results: The paper found that there were only 4.8 practicing doctors per 10,000 population available in India in 2014, in contrast to the belief of having 7 doctors per 10,000 people. Rest of the registered doctors have either retired or emigrated from the country to practice abroad. It is estimated that the country would be able to achieve a ratio of about 6.9 practicing doctors per 10,000 people only by 2030. Conclusion: Given these findings of the current availability of doctors per 10,000 people and their growth prospects over the next 15-year period, it looks like an impossible task to achieve even a moderate doctor-population ratio of 1:1000 by 2030. Therefore, a genuine commitment to provide equitable healthcare to the rural population must innovate and experiment a special cadre of practitioners for rural areas on a pan-India basis.http://www.ijph.in/article.asp?issn=0019-557X;year=2017;volume=61;issue=3;spage=182;epage=187;aulast=PotnuruAvailabilitydoctorsIndiamigration and health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Basant Potnuru
spellingShingle Basant Potnuru
Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030
Indian Journal of Public Health
Availability
doctors
India
migration and health
author_facet Basant Potnuru
author_sort Basant Potnuru
title Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030
title_short Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030
title_full Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030
title_fullStr Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030
title_full_unstemmed Aggregate availability of doctors in India: 2014–2030
title_sort aggregate availability of doctors in india: 2014–2030
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Indian Journal of Public Health
issn 0019-557X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Background: The current belief of availability of doctors in India is based on the registration stock of doctors accumulated since the early 20th century. This has not been adjusted to attrition of the strength occurring due to retirement, emigration, etc. Objectives: To estimate the number of practicing doctors currently available in India and will be available in 2030 after adjustments made for attrition of the stock. Methods: The paper used Medical Council of India's historical data (1960–2015) on registration stock of doctors obtained from the Indian medical registers available on its website and other data on emigration of doctors accessed from Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and destination country sources. Results: The paper found that there were only 4.8 practicing doctors per 10,000 population available in India in 2014, in contrast to the belief of having 7 doctors per 10,000 people. Rest of the registered doctors have either retired or emigrated from the country to practice abroad. It is estimated that the country would be able to achieve a ratio of about 6.9 practicing doctors per 10,000 people only by 2030. Conclusion: Given these findings of the current availability of doctors per 10,000 people and their growth prospects over the next 15-year period, it looks like an impossible task to achieve even a moderate doctor-population ratio of 1:1000 by 2030. Therefore, a genuine commitment to provide equitable healthcare to the rural population must innovate and experiment a special cadre of practitioners for rural areas on a pan-India basis.
topic Availability
doctors
India
migration and health
url http://www.ijph.in/article.asp?issn=0019-557X;year=2017;volume=61;issue=3;spage=182;epage=187;aulast=Potnuru
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