THE FACTUAL STATUS OF HEALTH IN INDIA

WHO Standards vs. Indian Reality

IndicatorWHO StandardIndia's Current Status (c. 2025-26)
Doctor-Patient Ratio1 : 1,0001 : 834 (Combined Allopathy + AYUSH)
Nurse-Patient Ratio3 : 1,0001.96 : 1,000 (Significant Shortage)
Health Expenditure5% of GDP1.84% to 1.9% (Public Spending)
Hospital Bed Density3 to 5 beds per 1,0000.6 to 0.79 per 1,000

A. Expenditure to GDP Ratio

    • National Health Policy (NHP) 2017 Target: To reach 2.5% of GDP by 2025.
    • Current Reality: Public health spending remains around 1.84% to 1.9% of GDP.
    • Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE): Remains high (roughly 38%), although it has dropped significantly from the 60% levels seen a decade ago.

B. Doctor-Patient Ratio

    • Statistical Success: On paper, India has surpassed the WHO norm of 1:1,000 if AYUSH (Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, and Homeopathy) practitioners are included, reaching 1:834.
    • The Structural Issue: There is a severe Rural-Urban Divide. While urban areas often meet the ratio, rural India faces a shortage of specialists. Over 70% of the healthcare workforce serves only 30% of the population (urban).

C. Shortage of Hospitals & Beds

    • Bed Shortage: India has a shortfall of approximately 2.4 million hospital beds to meet the NHP target of 2 beds per 1,000 people.
    • Infrastructure Density: India currently offers only 0.6 to 0.8 beds per 1,000 population, which is significantly lower than peer BRICS nations like China (~4.3) or Brazil (~2.1).
    • Primary Health Centres (PHCs): There is a persistent 20-30% shortage of PHCs and Community Health Centres (CHCs) in several states, particularly in the “BIMARU” belt.

Key Challenges

1. Triple Burden of Disease: India is simultaneously fighting infectious diseases (TB, Malaria), rising Non-Communicable Diseases (Diabetes, Heart Disease), and emerging zoonotic threats.

2. Missing Middle: Roughly 30% of the population (the “missing middle”) lacks any form of health insurance, being too “rich” for government schemes like PM-JAY but too poor for private insurance.

3. Human Resource Crunch: Beyond doctors, there is a massive shortage of laboratory technicians, radiologists, and specialized nursing staff.

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