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Context
The National Medical Commission Bill has to be fine-tuned, especially in planning for rural health care
The National Medical Commission Bill has to be fine-tuned, especially in planning for rural health care
The National Medical Commission Bill, aimed at reforming Indian medical education and practice, is in trouble. After countrywide protests by the Indian Medical Association, the Bill was referred by the Lok Sabha to a Parliamentary Standing Committee for a re-look. Whatever be the outcome of this exercise, the altered Bill is unlikely to please everyone.
Questions it seeks to address are knotty
- This is because the questions it seeks to address are knotty, with no straightforward answers. First, how can India produce enough competent doctors to meet its evolving health-care challenges?
- Second, how can it minimise opportunities for rent-seeking in medical education and practice? So poorly did India’s current medical regulator, the Medical Council of India (MCI), perform on both counts that policymakers believed the only way to redeem the body was to replace it.
MCI’s failures
The MCI’s failures are well known.
Allegations of bribery
For years, it was mired in allegations of bribery and going soft on unethical doctors
Obsolete medical curriculum
- Under its stewardship, the medical curriculum grew obsolete, resulting in a cadre of MBBS doctors who frequently couldn’t perform basic procedures
- This led to a rush among MBBS doctors to specialise, competing for a small number of post-graduation seats
- Today, India neither has enough basic doctors, nor specialists.
NMC
Enter the National Medical Commission (NMC), intended by policymakers to be a dynamic regulator responsive to India’s needs, unlike the opaque MCI
Distribution of powers under NMC unlike MCI
In contrast with the MCI, which does everything from advising universities on curriculum to disciplining errant doctors, the NMC distributes powers among four autonomous boards — those for undergraduate education, postgraduate education, medical assessment and rating, and ethics and registration
Non doctors included
Also, unlike the MCI, the commission includes non-doctors like patient-rights advocates and ethicists, in line with the medical regulators of the U.K., Australia and Canada
These are all steps in the right direction.
Major shortcoming of the NMC bill
How it chooses the members of the new regulator
The reason for new electoral process in NMC
The authors of the NMC bill, a committee headed by ex-vice chairman of NitiAayog, ArvindPanagariya, argued that :
- The electoral process through which MCI members were picked was fundamentally flawed, because conscientious doctors tended to avoid such elections
- Because there was no bar on re-elections, this had created a revolving door through which the same group of members controlled the MCI for years.
Example
Sometime around 2008, Gujarati urologist Ketan Desai was elected MCI president, even though he had been prosecuted in the Delhi High Court for abusing power as president in 2001. Further, corruption charges against Dr. Desai and his team led to the MCI being disbanded in 2010.
The proposed solution: Selection by Central government
The NMC Bill’s solution to the pitfalls of the electoral process is for the central government to select most of the commission’s members
But now the scales tipped towards bureaucracy
But this would tip the scales towards bureaucracy, say experts. “The babudom is now extreme,” says Rama Baru, a health-policy researcher who served on the ethics committee of the MCI between 2012 and 2014
Close ties of private medical colleges with politicians
Such political hold on the commission is especially problematic, she adds, given the close ties that private medical colleges in southern India have with politicians
Solutions:
Should have limited term
Ms. Baru is in favour of more elected members in the commission, but with limited terms of office, so that corrupt members aren’t re-elected.
Independent body like UPSC to select its members
Another option to keep the NMC free from political influence is for an independent body like the Union Public Service Commission to select its members, says Sujatha K. Rao, a former Union Health Secretary
Example
Such a model is followed in the U.K., where the Professional Standards Authority oversees the selection of members to the General Medical Council
People selected should be of high integrity
Whatever route the NMC takes, it is critical that its members are professionals of high integrity, something that isn’t ensured in the current Bill. “Any law will succeed if it is implemented by good people. The best law, if implemented by corrupt people, can fail,” says Ms. Rao.
Shortage of doctors
- The NMC Bill also misses an opportunity to plan for India’s rural health- care needs in the coming decades.
- While it eases regulations to set up private medical colleges, a move that will hopefully produce more doctors, this measure isn’t enough
Not enough in rural India
As of today, India has one doctor for 1,700 people, compared to the WHO norm of 1:1,000. Most of these doctors are in urban regions, while close to 70% of Indians live in rural provinces. This gap isn’t going to close any time soon
Till 2029
A 2015 Parliamentary Standing Committee report mentioned that even if India were to add 100 medical colleges per year for five years, it would take till 2029 to achieve the WHO prescribed ratio.
Even in TN
Even in States like Tamil Nadu, which has successfully attracted doctors to rural primary health centres (PHCs), tribal regions like Sittilingi are underserved and rely heavily on informal health-care providers, says MeenakshiGautham, a health policy researcher at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical medicine.
Need of quick fixes now
This is why India must think of quicker fixes to the doctor shortage instead of waiting for MBBS doctors to fill the gap. “We can’t ask populations here to wait for ten years till we produce enough doctors. Neither can we wait for rural areas to become urbanised,” she reasons.
Training non-doctors: Quacks
Several sub-Saharan countries have successfully addressed this problem by training non-doctors in basic medicine and even surgery. Such non-doctors include nurses, or even informal health-care providers, often referred to as quacks
9 months of training led to marked improvement
A 2016 study published in Science magazine showed that nine months of training led to a marked improvement in the ability of informal providers in West Bengal to correctly manage chest-pain, respiratory distress and childhood diarrhoea
International organisations endorse such type of training for critical procedures also
International organisations like Médecins Sans Frontières and Red Cross have endorsed training programmes for non-doctors to carry out critical surgical procedures like caesarians and intestinal resections
Examples
- Evidence from countries like Mozambique and Thailand shows that such training can be a safe, effective and cheap way to provide life-saving health care when no doctors are available
- This is why even Chhattisgarh attempted to create a cadre of rural doctors in 2001, through a three-year programme
IMA opposed to such ideas
Even though the Indian Medical Association has strongly opposed such ideas, they cannot be off the table, given the evidence backing them
MBBS doctors not the best mode of health care delivery in rural India
Ms. Gautham says it is time to recognise that MBBS doctors may not be the best means of health-care delivery in isolated parts of rural India
The NMC Bill should, at the very least, include a provision to debate this idea.
The 1956 Indian Medical Council Act
The 1956 Indian Medical Council Act, under which the MCI in its current form came to life, set the agenda for nearly 60 years of medical education and practice
The NMC Bill could do the same for the next few decades
Conclusion
If policymakers do not address the many questions that health-care experts have raised over the Bill today, they will miss their chance at truly game-changing reform.