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Human Resources for health

The People Health Movement’s comment on Human Resources for Health is linked here and is a useful critical discussion on the subject offering further references. Another recent and useful global study is “Feminization of the Health and Care Workforce in India and South Asia: Implications for Women’s Labor and Decent Work”  by Deepika Joshi and others.

International Policies

On International policies, we flag a number of essential documents which set out the global health workforce policies at a glance. The first of these is Working Together for Health – The World Health Report 2006 published by the World Health Organisation. This book begins with a presentation of the number and distribution of health workers. It then covers shaping this workforce to address priority needs and then describes the strategies required for the management of the health workforce as well as global movements.
A more recent and updated statement on global health workforce policy is the Global Health and Care Worker Compact which was adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2022. The policy actions in this book are categorised as those preventing harm; inclusivity; providing support and safeguarding rights.  Another landmark document is the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel adopted in 2010 and reviewed every 3 years. These guidelines have since been updated and published in year 2021 as “WHO guideline on health workforce development, attraction, recruitment and retention in rural and remote areas” One should also refer to the Global Strategy of Human Resources for Health for 2022-2030 as adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2022. The People Health Movement’s comment on these 4 documents is linked here and is a useful critical discussion on the subject offering further references.

National Policies

We share a number of papers presenting an overview of Human Resources for Health. Some of these were policy briefs written at different times for the Ministry.

The earlier is a policy brief written in 2011: Policy Brief: Human Resource for Health: The Crisis, the NRHM Response and the Policy Options,

A well-known and highly cited overview is the Lancet publication. Human resources for health in India; Prof Mohan Rao, Dr Krishna D Rao, AK Shiva Kumar, Mirai Chatterjee, Thiagarajan Sundararaman; The Lancet, Volume 377, Issue 9765, Pages 587 – 598, 12 February 2011. This was part of the Lancet Special Series on India.

A less well-known  Policy brief on Human Resources for Health, 2018, written for the Economic Advisory Committee of the Prime Minister, perhaps around 2018-19. This largely looked at the numbers required.

Professional Education

We begin with an overview article, written as cover-page article for the periodical “ Frontline” on “ Healthcare Education in the New Education Policy.” This article written in 2019  briefly covers the main challenges in Medical education.

Then we share another brief article called “Revisiting NEET.” Published in June 2019 EPW, which explains sympathetically the Tamil Nadu position on why they are critical of the imposition of NEET as the sole mode of entry into medical colleges.

Public Workforce Management

We begin with chapter 15: Human Resource Management from the ‘Management of Healthcare Systems’ book by Sonu Goel and Arun Kumar Aggarwal.

Then one article on the creation of a public health cadre titled:  Professionalizing public health management. T. Sundararaman, Daksha Parmar, Seminar, Issue No. 714 , February 2019, 52 — a discussion on public health cadre and such other things.

And a third on “Indian approaches to retaining skilled health workers in rural areas;” Thiagarajan Sundararaman & Garima Gupta; Bulletin World Health Organization 2011;89:73–77

The issue of which type of professionals are most fit for purpose has been discussed in the earlier decades. We present three articles relating to this….

Case Studies

Innovations in Workforce Management in Karnataka

The first case study examines the intractable problem of transfers and postings with the government health department, highlighting the State of Karnataka’s implementation of systemic changes and innovations, including the Transfer Act of 2011 and the development of a Human Resource Management System (HRMS).

Chhattisgarh Rural Medical Corps

The second case study focuses on the Chhattisgarh Rural Medical Corps (CRMC), established to retain and motivate healthcare providers to work in rural and remote areas through a scheme of incentives for current public sector employees, but also with space for participation of retired employees and private sector professionals. This addresses the shortage and skewed distribution of health workers in rural India, a problem not unique to India but prevalent globally.

Rural Health Practitioners in Assam: Mid level care Provider for comprehensive service deliery in sub centers

The third case study looks at a challenge closely linked to the earlier issue: finding the appropriate professional boundary to solve the shortage for health professionals with clinical skills in public services and primary care and find a professional who feels happy and fulfilled in working in this domain. While many believe this began with the introduction of the Community Health Officer (CHO) in 2018, this case study shows an early and successful effort in this direction over 15 years earlier. Clearly the concept of a mid-level healthcare provider (MLHP) made it into the National Health Policy of 2017 based on such earlier efforts which could be described as incubating the concept of MLHPs for over 15 years. This case study explores how the Assam Rural Health Regulatory Act of 2004 introduced the Diploma in Medicine and Rural Health Care (D.M.R.H.C.) program to train Rural Health Practitioners (RHPs) to deliver comprehensive primary health services at the village level.