Sabde Yogesh, Diwan Vishal, De Costa Ayesha, Mahadik Vijay K
R.D. Gardi Medical College, Ujjain, India.
BMC Med Educ. 2014 Dec 17;14:266. doi: 10.1186/s12909-014-0266-1.
India has witnessed rapid growth in its number of medical schools over the last few decades, particularly in recent years. One dominant feature of this growth has been expansion in the private medical education sector. At this point it is relevant to trace historically and geographically the changing role of public and private sectors in Indian medical education system.
The information on medical schools and sociodemographic indicators at provincial, district and sub-district (taluks) level were retrieved from available online databases. A digital map of medical schools was plotted on a geo-referenced map of India. The growth of medical schools in public and private sectors was tracked over last seven decades using line diagrams and thematic maps. The growth of medical schools in context of geographic distribution and access across the poorer and relatively richer provinces as well as the country's districts and taluks was explored using geographic information system. Finally candidate geographic areas, identified for intervention from equity perspective were plotted on the map of India.
The study presents findings of 355 medical schools in India that enrolled 44250 students in 2012. Private sector owned 195 (54.9%) schools and enrolled 24205 (54.7%) students in the same year. The 18 poorly performing provinces (population 620 million, 51.3%) had only 94 (26.5%) medical schools. The presence of the private sector was significantly lower in poorly performing provinces where it owned 38 (40.4%) medical schools as compared to 157 (60.2%) schools in better performing provinces. The distances to medical schools from taluks in poorly performing provinces were longer [median 65.1 kilometres (km)] than from taluks in better performing provinces (median 41.2 km). Taluks farthest from a medical school were, situated in economically poorer districts with poor health indicators, a lower standard of living index and low levels of urbanization.
The distribution of medical schools in India is skewed in the favour of areas (provinces, districts and taluks) with better indicators of health, urbanization, standards of living and economic prosperity. This particular distribution was most evident in the case of private sector schools set up in recent decades.
在过去几十年,尤其是近年来,印度医学院数量迅速增长。这种增长的一个主要特征是私立医学教育部门的扩张。此时,从历史和地理角度追溯公共和私营部门在印度医学教育体系中不断变化的角色具有重要意义。
从现有的在线数据库中检索省级、地区级和县级(县辖区)的医学院及社会人口统计学指标信息。在印度的地理参考地图上绘制医学院的数字地图。使用折线图和专题地图追踪过去七十年来公立和私立部门医学院的增长情况。利用地理信息系统探讨医学院在地理分布以及较贫困和相对富裕省份以及该国各地区和县辖区的可及性方面的增长情况。最后,从公平角度确定的候选地理干预区域绘制在印度地图上。
该研究展示了印度355所医学院的调查结果,这些医学院在2012年招收了44250名学生。同年,私立部门拥有195所(54.9%)学校,招收了24205名(54.7%)学生。18个表现不佳的省份(人口6.2亿,占51.3%)仅有94所(26.5%)医学院。在表现不佳的省份,私立部门的占比显著较低,其拥有38所(40.4%)医学院,而在表现较好的省份有157所(60.2%)。表现不佳省份的县辖区到医学院的距离[中位数65.1公里(km)]比表现较好省份的县辖区(中位数41.2公里)更远。距离医学院最远的县辖区位于经济较贫困、健康指标较差、生活水平较低且城市化程度较低的地区。
印度医学院的分布偏向于健康、城市化、生活水平和经济繁荣指标较好的地区(省份、地区和县辖区)。这种特殊分布在近几十年设立的私立部门学校中最为明显。