
IKP Centre for Technologies in Public
Health (ICTPH), a non-governmental organization(NGO), is working with a
field based partner in Thanjavur in Tamil Nadu to field-test its
concepts on provision of primary care and integration of care across
higher levels.
The changes that would be necessary in the overall
health systems design if we are to succeed in providing high quality
health care requires four complementary dimensions covering human
resources, infrastructure, interventions and financing, stated Dr
Nachiket Mor, director, IKP Centre for Technologies in Public Health
(ICTPH) and head, Sughavazhvu Healthcare in Thanjavur.
“Over time
we hope to expand the number of engagement partners. On the research
and training front, we have partnered with the University of
Pennsylvania School of Nursing, University of Washington’s Brown School
of Social Work and Public Health, Adyar Cancer Institute in Chennai, and
L. V. Prasad Eye Institute in Hyderabad. These initiatives will allow
us to move closer to a vision of universal and high quality healthcare
for all within the financial and human resources available, stated Dr
Mor, who was in Bangalore recently for the TB Diagnostics in India
Conference held at St. John’s Research Institute.
India needs an
Essential Health System and Design Innovation. The country has a low
supply of physicians that are qualified in allopathic medicine and the
few that are qualified are unwilling to serve in remote and challenging
locations. The disease burden continues to have a high proportion of
infectious diseases like tuberculosis and other chronic diseases, said
Dr. Mor.
As a member of the Union government’s High Level Expert
Committee on Universal Health Care, Dr Mor is of the view that India
could have access to affordable and quality healthcare only if radical
changes are made in the manner in which this sector is financed.
Primary
healthcare must be available close to where people live. In addition,
higher levels of care, while easily available and accessible to
citizens, must be closely integrated with primary care and focused on
the whole individual . The financing, risk sharing and referral
mechanisms must act in work to ensure that this happens. Spain in the
developed world and Thailand in the developing world are health systems
models which India should emulate in healthcare.
The research
work being carried out at ICTPH is dedicated to developing viable models
for making this vision a reality in the Indian context. While viable
solutions do exist they need to be found with multiple components of
design working closely together. India has done a relatively good job
of addressing challenges at the secondary and tertiary care level, as
evidenced by the growing medical tourism industry, on the twin
dimensions of provision of Primary care and integration of care across
higher levels.
The focus of ICTPH’s will be on human resources
strategies, advanced point of care diagnostics, health management
information systems, and expert architectural designs. These components
have the potential to dramatically transform the provision of primary
healthcare and the integration of care across levels, she stated.
SO PROUD TO SHARE THIS ! BECOZ I AM ALSO WORKING IN THIS CONCERN
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