Recently, India approved 43 new medical colleges, 20,649 additional MBBS and PG seats for 2025-26. However, rural CHCs still face persistent gaps in public healthcare delivery.
Challenges in Public Healthcare delivery System
- Acute Shortage of Specialist: Rural Community Health Centres (CHCs) face nearly 80% specialist vacancies, with only 4,413 specialists available against the requirement of 21,964.
- Despite addition of 72,627 PG seats across 731 medical colleges since 2014, expansion in medical education has not translated into adequate specialist availability in public healthcare facilities.
- Weak Health Governance Framework: Of the 43 newly approved medical colleges for 2025-26, 27 are private institutions with limited accountability towards public health workforce deployment.
- Reluctance of Doctors to Serve in Rural Areas: Newly graduated specialists are often unwilling to work in remote and underserved areas.
- Flawed Budgetary Priorities: The central health budget heavily prioritizes capital expenditure and building infrastructure rather than functional operations.
Measures required for improving Public Healthcare delivery System
- Align PG Medical Education with Public Health Needs: Link postgraduate medical admissions and specialist training with vacancies in CHCs and district hospitals.
- Aspirant doctors should be required to sign an undertaking to serve in a designated government facility, with priority given to candidates willing to commit to a 10-year service bond in difficult-area CHCs.
- Promote Rural Specialist Deployment: Provide financial incentives, housing, quality schooling and career progression benefits for doctors serving in difficult and remote areas.
- Adopting the "All or None" Deployment Strategy: A CHC should either receive the full required team of five specialists or none at all, which distributes the workload better.
Initiatives taken to strengthen Health System
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