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What will it take to assist our doctors?

Image Courtesy: Livemint

July 1st is World Doctor’s Day — an opportunity in the year to appreciate some of the heroes of our public health system. It’s also the perfect time to reflect on some of the things India’s public health system needs to do better in order to adequately support the heroic efforts of its workforce.

So here’s a quick roundup of some of the key challenges in providing support to health workers in the public health system:

Planning: Inadequate HR professionals and policies in the public health system, and in particular recruitment based on vacancies rather than actual requirements, leads to poor planning for human resource allocation. Tedious and gender-biased recruitment processes also don’t help with hiring the best talent available.
Migration: Due to poor facilities, support and opportunities, qualified rural health workers tend to migrate to urban areas, leaving rural facilities inadequately staffed.
Capacity Building: Narrowly conceived in terms of training, capacity building of health workers is also hamstrung by the small number of institutions providing it, trainers with limited tools and skills for the job, insufficient budgets and poor post-training monitoring. Without a complete system in place to continuously build capacity, from capacity building needs assessment before to handholding support afterwards, existing health workers can’t fulfil their potential.