In India, the Privatization of Medical Education Has Created a Health-Care Conundrum

Authors

  • Guroo Narayan Singh Assistant Professor, Department of Education, Sanskriti University, Mathura, Uttar Pradesh Author
  • Prabhu Nath Singh Assistant Professor, Department of Education, Sanskriti University, Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, India Author

Keywords:

Allopath, Bio-Med, Health Care, Private Medical Education, Medical Education

Abstract

Medical education privatization can  increase its breadth and usability by producing a set of  osteopathic medical professionals for Indians, so how can  it be a replacement to building capacity with the expertise  and skill mix, particularly when services are needed? Involving human lives require urgent rethinking? The goal  of this study is to look at the problems surrounding the  privatization of India's medical education system.  Materials and Procedures: Since the past 20 years, a  systematic evaluation of major indexed journals of key  medical search engines, such as Pub med, Here on primary  search words "Corporatization of Health Schooling," we  searched Lancet, Microbe Online, and Google Scholar in  all forms, including u t. India ranks 67th out from 133  underdeveloped countries in a WHO survey, with just a  pediatrician proportion of 1:1700, contrasted to a  nationwide average of 1.5:1000. That is to say, despite  over than fifty years of freedom, not a single doctor is  available for every 1000 people; a goal that is still a long  way off, according to the Bhore committee's  recommendation in 1946, which was later modified by the  Mudaliar committee in 1961 and the Bajaj committee in  1987. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

M. Rao, K. D. Rao, A. S. Kumar, M. Chatterjee, and T. Sundararaman, “Human resources for health in India,” The Lancet. 2011.

“Does Expenditure on Education Affect Economic Growth in India? Evidence from Cointegration and Granger Causality Analysis,” Theor. Appl. Econ., 2015.

P. Sinha and P. Sigamani, “Key challenges of human resources for health in India,” Glob. J. Med. Public Heal., 2016.

D. Nandan, K. S. Nair, and U. Datta, “Human resources for public health in India - Issues and challenges,” Health and Population: Perspectives and Issues. 2007.

R. Bhattacharya, “Comparative Analysis of the Extent of Free Education and Average Private Expenditure on Education in India,” Procedia - Soc. Behav. Sci., 2012.

S. Chowdhury and P. Bose, “Expenditure on Education in India: A Short Note,” Soc. Sci., 2004.

W. J. Bicknell, A. C. Beggs, and P. Van Tham, “Determining the full costs of medical education in Thai Binh, Vietnam: A generalizable model,” Health Policy Plan., 2001.

M. Rizwan, N. J. Rosson, S. Tackett, and H. T. Hassoun, “Globalization of Medical Education: Current Trends and Opportunities for Medical Students,” J. Med. Educ. Train., 2018.

H. Alameri, H. Hamdy, and D. Sims, “Medical education in the United Arab Emirates: Challenges and opportunities,” Med. Teach., 2021.

M. Rao, K. D. Rao, A. K. S. Kumar, M. Chatterjee, and T. Sundararaman, “India : Towards Universal Health Coverage 5 Human resources for health in India,” Lancet, 2011.

A. De Costa, A. Al-Muniri, V. K. Diwan, and B. Eriksson, “Where are healthcare providers? Exploring relationships between context and human resources for health Madhya Pradesh province, India,” Health Policy (New. York)., 2009.

P. Yang, V. Lin, and J. Lawson, “Health policy reform in the People’s Republic of China,” Int. J. Heal. Serv., 1991. [13] N. Giesbrecht, A. Ialomiteanu, and L. Anglin, “Drinking patterns and perspectives on alcohol policy: Results from two Ontario surveys,” Alcohol Alcohol., 2005.

A. Gillissen, “[International cooperation. Better medical education thanks to private universities].,” MMW Fortschritte der Medizin. 2014.

M. Takamuku, “Issues related to national university medical schools: focusing on the low wages of university hospital physicians,” Nihon Geka Gakkai zasshi. 2015.

M. A. Santana-Morales et al., “Haemoglobin levels for population from Gambo, a rural area of Ethiopia, and their association with anaemia and malaria,” Malar. J., 2013.

T. V., D. D., and G. Z., “The Child Health Care System of Macedonia,” J. Pediatr., 2016.

“Social issues in America: an encyclopedia,” Choice Rev. Online, 2006.

D. S. and S. . S. Dawn O. P., “Stress in school teachers of a school in west bengal, India,” Indian J. Psychiatry, 2015. [20] N. B. Macintosh, “Hospital accounting and information systems: A critical assessment,” Aust. Heal. Rev., 1991. [21] D. Lupton and G. M. Thomas, and Gamification of Expectant Motherhood in Smartphone Apps,” M/C J., 2015. [22] P. E. Plsek et al., “Redesigning Health Care with Insights from the Science of Complex Adaptive Systems,” Public Manag. Rev., 2006.

K. L. Ulibarri, “Neoliberalism,” in The Routledge Companion to Latino/a Literature, 2012.

O. Hazzan et al., “Preface,” J. Syst. Softw., 2009. [25] C. Royle et al., “Assessing ecosystem services for informing land-use decisions: a problem-oriented approach,” Ecol. Soc., 2016.

Downloads

Published

2023-11-03

How to Cite

In India, the Privatization of Medical Education Has Created a Health-Care Conundrum . (2023). International Journal of Innovative Research in Engineering & Management, 9(1), 440–443. Retrieved from https://acspublisher.com/journals/index.php/ijirem/article/view/11368