SATHI, Pune, India.
Department of International Development, King's College London, London, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2020 Feb 11;5(2):e002026. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2019-002026. eCollection 2020.
A heterogeneous private sector dominates healthcare provision in many middle-income countries. In India, the contemporary period has seen this sector undergo corporatisation processes characterised by emergence of large private hospitals and the takeover of medium-sized and charitable hospitals by corporate entities. Little is known about the operations of these private providers and the effects on healthcare professions as employment shifts from practitioner-owned small and medium hospitals to larger corporate settings. This article uses data from a mixed-methods study in two large cities in Maharashtra, India, to consider the implications of these contemporary changes for the medical profession. Data were collected from semistructured interviews with 43 respondents who have detailed knowledge of healthcare in Maharashtra and from a witness seminar on the topic of transformation in Maharashtra's healthcare system. Transcripts from the interviews and witness seminar were analysed thematically through a combination of deductive and inductive approaches. Our findings point to a restructuring of medical practice in Maharashtra as training shifts towards private education and employment to those corporate hospitals. The latter is fuelled by substantial personal indebtedness, dwindling appeal of government employment, reduced opportunities to work in smaller private facilities and the perceived benefits of work in larger providers. We describe a 'reprofessionalisation' of medicine encompassing changes in employment relations, performance targets and constraints placed on professional autonomy within the private healthcare sector that is accompanied by trends in cost inflation, medical malpractice, and distrust in doctor-patient relationships. The accompanying 'restratification' within this part of the profession affords prestige and influence to 'star doctors' while eroding the status and opportunity for young and early career doctors. The research raises important questions about the role that government and medical professionals' bodies can, and should, play in contemporary transformation of private healthcare and the implications of these trends for health systems more broadly.
在许多中等收入国家,多元化的私营部门主导着医疗保健服务的提供。在印度,当代社会见证了私营部门经历了企业化过程,大型私立医院的出现以及企业实体接管中型和慈善医院。对于这些私营医疗机构的运营情况以及随着就业从从业者所有的小型和中型医院向更大的企业环境转移对医疗保健专业人员的影响,人们知之甚少。本文使用了来自印度马哈拉施特拉邦两个大城市的混合方法研究的数据,考虑了这些当代变化对医学专业的影响。从马哈拉施特拉邦医疗保健方面有详细了解的 43 位受访者的半结构化访谈中以及主题为马哈拉施特拉邦医疗保健系统转型的证人研讨会上收集了数据。通过演绎和归纳相结合的方法对访谈和证人研讨会的记录进行了主题分析。我们的研究结果表明,由于培训转向私立教育,就业转向那些企业医院,马哈拉施特拉邦的医疗实践正在进行重组。后者的推动因素是大量的个人债务、政府就业吸引力的下降、在较小的私人机构工作机会的减少以及在较大的医疗机构工作的好处的感知。我们描述了一种“再职业化”的医学,包括就业关系、绩效目标和对私营医疗保健部门专业自主权的限制的变化,这些变化伴随着成本膨胀、医疗事故和医患关系中不信任的趋势。在这一专业领域内的“再分层”为“明星医生”提供了威望和影响力,同时侵蚀了年轻和早期职业医生的地位和机会。这项研究提出了关于政府和医学专业人员机构在当代私营医疗保健转型中可以并且应该发挥的作用的重要问题,以及这些趋势对更广泛的卫生系统的影响。