Indian Institute of Public Health-Delhi, Public Health Foundation of India, Plot No. 47, Sector 44, Institutional Area, Gurugram, Haryana, 122002, India.
South-East Asia Regional Office, World Health Organization, Indraprastha Estate, Mahatma Gandhi Marg, Outer Ring Road, New Delhi, 110002, India.
Hum Resour Health. 2023 Mar 2;21(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s12960-023-00802-y.
COVID-19 has reinforced the importance of having a sufficient, well-distributed and competent health workforce. In addition to improving health outcomes, increased investment in health has the potential to generate employment, increase labour productivity and foster economic growth. We estimate the required investment for increasing the production of the health workforce in India for achieving the UHC/SDGs.
We used data from National Health Workforce Account 2018, Periodic Labour Force Survey 2018-19, population projection of Census of India, and government documents and reports. We distinguish between total stock of health professionals and active health workforce. We estimated current shortages in the health workforce using WHO and ILO recommended health worker:population ratio thresholds and extrapolated the supply of health workforce till 2030, using a range of scenarios of production of doctors and nurses/midwives. Using unit costs of opening a new medical college/nursing institute, we estimated the required levels of investment to bridge the potential gap in the health workforce.
To meet the threshold of 34.5 skilled health workers per 10 000 population, there will be a shortfall of 0.16 million doctors and 0.65 million nurses/midwives in the total stock and 0.57 million doctors and 1.98 million nurses/midwives in active health workforce by the year 2030. The shortages are higher when compared with a higher threshold of 44.5 health workers per 10 000 population. The estimated investment for the required increase in the production of health workforce ranges from INR 523 billion to 2 580 billion for doctors and INR 1 096 billion for nurses/midwives. Such investment during 2021-2025 has the potential of an additional employment generation within the health sector to the tune of 5.4 million and to contribute to national income to the extent of INR 3 429 billion annually.
India needs to significantly increase the production of doctors and nurses/midwives through investing in opening up new medical colleges. Nursing sector should be prioritized to encourage talents to join nursing profession and provide quality education. India needs to set up a benchmark for skill-mix ratio and provide attractive employment opportunities in the health sector to increase the demand and absorb the new graduates.
COVID-19 凸显了拥有充足、分布均匀且具备能力的卫生人力的重要性。除了改善健康结果外,增加对卫生的投资还有可能创造就业机会、提高劳动生产率并促进经济增长。我们估算了印度增加卫生人力以实现全民健康覆盖/可持续发展目标所需的投资。
我们使用了 2018 年国家卫生人力账户、2018-19 年定期劳动力调查、印度人口普查的人口预测以及政府文件和报告的数据。我们区分了卫生专业人员的总存量和活跃卫生人力。我们使用世卫组织和国际劳工组织建议的卫生工作者与人口比例阈值估算了卫生人力的当前短缺情况,并使用医生和护士/助产士生产的一系列情景外推了到 2030 年的卫生人力供应情况。我们使用开设新医学院/护理学院的单位成本估算了弥补潜在卫生人力差距所需的投资水平。
要达到每 10 000 人口 34.5 名熟练卫生工作者的阈值,到 2030 年,总存量将短缺 0.16 百万名医生和 0.65 百万名护士/助产士,活跃卫生人力将短缺 0.57 百万名医生和 1.98 百万名护士/助产士。与每 10 000 人口 44.5 名卫生工作者的较高阈值相比,短缺情况更为严重。为增加卫生人力生产所需的投资估计在医生方面为 5230 亿至 25800 亿卢比,在护士/助产士方面为 10960 亿卢比。2021-2025 年期间进行此类投资,有可能在卫生部门创造多达 540 万个额外就业机会,并使国家收入每年增加 34290 亿卢比。
印度需要通过投资开办新医学院大幅增加医生和护士/助产士的产量。应优先重视护理部门,以鼓励人才加入护理行业并提供优质教育。印度需要为技能组合比例设定基准,并在卫生部门提供有吸引力的就业机会,以增加需求并吸纳新毕业生。