Indian rural healthcare centres are so few and so burdened that people are avoiding them
May 25, 2022, 11:17 IST
- There is a massive shortage of primary healthcare centres in states like Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand and Andhra Pradesh.
- A shortfall here means that the number of existing centres are quite less to fulfill the demand for healthcare services in the states.
- Bihar has the highest percentage shortfall in sub-centres.
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An average rural family in India spends ₹4,280 towards childbirth at a government hospital. If they choose to go to a private facility, this expense can be as high as ₹27,000, according to a recent State of Inequality report. Since childbirth is the most common healthcare seeking event for most villagers, a government facility in the vicinity can help. More than half of the population of Bihar – at 58% – does not have access to even a midwife let alone doctors who are usually available at sub-centers. A subcentre also has a male healthcare worker and takes care of basic needs like immunisation.
Healthcare – still a distant dream for most Indian villages
If the rural population needs a doctor, they need to go to a PHC or a primary healthcare center. More than half of the people in Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal do not have it.
Yet, a large number of rural areas lack proper healthcare infrastructure – and in particular, the states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal – which face an acute shortage of PHCs.
A PHC or a primary healthcare center (PHC) is manned by at least one doctor covering a population of 20,000 people, has at least four beds, and is preventive and curative while a sub-center offers very basic services like immunization.
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State | Shortage |
Uttar Pradesh | 51% |
West Bengal | 58% |
Jharkhand | 73% |
Andhra Pradesh | 60% |
A few states however added more medical facilities
On the other hand, some states like Rajasthan, Jammu & Kashmir, Gujarat, and Chhattisgarh have reported a rise in the number of PHCs from 2005, according to the report.
State | No. of PHCs added |
Rajasthan | 381 |
Gujarat | 407 |
Jammu and Kashmir | 589 |
Chhattisgarh | 275 |
Footfalls going down at rural healthcare centres
The rural population is also becoming increasingly disillusioned with government-provided healthcare services. In a few states, people have started to avoid them.
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“Andhra Pradesh has recorded a downfall in all three centres pointing towards a possibility of overburdened healthcare units leading to less interaction with the community, inadequate medical attention to the patients and thinly stretched medical facilities,” the report said referring to sub-centres, PHCs and also community healthcare centers (CHCs).CHCs house specialists, at least 30 beds and an operation theatre.
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