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Oct 12, 2019

Why India's Surgical Care Crisis Is Less Jigsaw, More Tetris – in Three Charts

India's healthcare system has an imbalanced workforce that renders the system dysfunctional and handicaps those health workers that already exist in sufficient numbers.

When I was six, I hit the footstep of a rickshaw running on the road and broke my nose. My parents rushed me to the clinic. My mother practices there as an ophthalmologist but because the injury was minor, she decided to suture it herself. My father stepped in as the anaesthesiologist, in case anything went wrong. I was back home later that day. Over the next few days, I had a few comfortable dressing and follow-up sessions and that was that. My parents had rescued my beautiful nose.

This experience had been nearly utopian: free, immediate and of good quality. But such surgical care remains out of reach of most Indians, and they often have more grievous injuries. One of my doctor-friends recently treated a child with a congenital anorectal deformity. Her parents were illiterate and lived in a rural area, so it took them almost a month to realise something was wrong. Unlike me, this child had to travel for half a day to access a doctor. Unlike me, the cost of her surgery and care thereafter will have taken quite the toll on the family’s income and savings. But this child is still to be presumed fortunate because millions of people in India whose lives can be saved frequently die because they couldn’t get surgeries when they most needed them.

Solving the surgical care crisis is not like a jigsaw puzzle, where you put all the pieces together to create a definite shape and win. It’s more like playing Tetris, where things are constantly falling apart and you need to do the best you can in dynamic fashion. There are health centres in India where there are surgeons but no operating rooms. There are others where there are rooms but an insufficient number of beds. If one is lucky to have both operating and enough beds, there still might not be a blood-bank, even the required types of blood or all the essential drugs – shortages exacerbated by poor sterilisation practices, etc.

Successfully delivering good-quality surgical care depends on all the building blocks of the health centre and their interactions. That said, the problem’s complexity shouldn’t deter us from attempting to solve it, especially now. Unlike a vaccine that is specific to a disease, surgery as a medical tool can ameliorate suffering due to a variety of diseases, from blindness to cancers, and to address disabilities due to trauma and/or injury. Second, a healthcare system able to dispense surgical care efficiently and ethically can address society’s other needs simply by virtue of its existence. For example, a system designed to deliver surgical care also includes infrastructure to run other public health programmes as well.

Indeed, even if it’s a difficult problem to solve, good surgical care is (almost) the endgame of public health. The Lancet Commission on Global Surgical Care published its most comprehensive report on the topic in 2015, which reaffirms surgery as a safe and cost-effective intervention across countries and diseases.

The Karad Consensus Statement, which the members of the Association of Rural Surgeons India (ARSI) developed and which the National Surgical Forum showcased during its proceedings in 2016, strongly vouches for the need to address the rural surgical care crisis. ARSI has also pushed for rural surgery as a medical research and practice specialisation.

But global calls for action and the initiatives of enthusiasts have always been insufficient to effect real change. Such change is the people’s prerogative, so there can’t be rural surgical care without a rural surgical workforce. This includes a variety of health workers: surgeons, other doctors who perform surgeries, anaesthesiologists, nursing staff and other surgical support staff (radiographers, lab technicians, etc.). While the WHO has developed estimates for adequate numbers of doctors, nurses and midwives, it doesn’t provide any on the number of surgeons or surgical staff.

There is another, deeper problem in rural India. Consider the following charts built on data from the 2018 Rural Health Statistics (RHS), available on the website of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. When considered individually, they lead to some obvious observations.

Also read: A Doctor’s Strike Was Inevitable in West Bengal’s Broken Health System

The first (below) depicts the density (per 10,000 people living in rural areas) of surgeons and doctors performing surgical procedures at primary health centres and community health centres for each state. The orange states have a lower density than the national figure and the blue states have a higher density. Notice the cluster of states in central and northern India that have a deficit of surgeons and doctors relative to the national figure.

Visualisation: Siddhesh Zadey

Visualisation: Siddhesh Zadey

The second visualisation (below) depicts the density of nursing staff. Notice the deficit in central-southern and western states.

Visualisation: Siddhesh Zadey

Visualisation: Siddhesh Zadey

The third visualisation (below) shows up the shortage of support staff – including lab technicians, radiographers and pharmacists – in the northern states along with Maharashtra and Andra Pradesh.

Visualisation: Siddhesh Zadey

Visualisation: Siddhesh Zadey

When taken together, the charts show an imbalanced workforce. There are states that have enough surgeons but not enough nursing staff (e.g. Maharashtra and Andra Pradesh). There are states that have nursing staff but not the support staff (e.g. Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal). This lopsidedness renders the healthcare system dysfunctional, and handicaps those health workers that already exist in sufficient numbers.

Additionally, there should’ve been a fourth map for anaesthesiologists but the RHS data on this is missing – possibly because anaesthesiologists simply don’t work in rural areas. Dr Gnanaraj Jesudian, the president of ARSI, recently told this author, “From my experience of working for over three decades in rural and remote areas, I would say the biggest challenge is the lack of anaesthesiologists in rural areas.”

All together, it’s clear why India’s rural healthcare system is dysfunctional, particularly on the surgical care front. It’s important to note that there is also something to learn from Kerala and Tamil Nadu, which seem to be doing better in all three visualisations.

Our health policies should resolve such disparities instead of simply increasing the supply of newly graduated doctors in rural areas. The visualisations also tell us that policymaking needs to be evidence-based and decentralised: state governments are the bigger stakeholders in this context and should use official data to frame smarter policies.

Siddhesh Zadey is a graduate student at the Global Health at the Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University. He co-leads a research group named Asar in India.

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