The three-tier system — health sub-centres (SC), primary healthcare centres (PHC) and CHCs — is characterised by paucity and absenteeism. Ensuring that each level of healthcare is staffed will require providing incentives, making it a condition of admission, or a requirement to access freeships and scholarships. All SCs and PHCs have a general practitioner, auxiliary nurse/midwife and healthcare worker. But even on paper, these are understaffed.
More funds, though necessary, are not sufficient alone to fix the problem. A functioning system with strong accountabilities is required to ensure appointed medical staff actually do their job. Fixing this extreme rural-urban disparity will require incentives to get doctors, nurses and technical staff to sign up. A programme that gives a 4-5-year employment contract to young medical graduates and newly retired health practitioners could get healthcare staff to serve in rural areas. Getting teaching hospitals in districts to serve the rural centres is another nudge.