Health care - systemic crisis?
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the noble profession
Navshot avare'
Particularly healthcare and education were considered 'noble' fields until recent years, where professionals were not supposed to make money. So much so, even as engineers' and other professionals' salaries shot up with liberalisation, doctors and teachers continued to get a raw deal. Even as recently as some 6 years back, my own nephew opted for engineering, inspite of having an aptitude, inclination and better CET ranking for medicine. His logic was plain and simple - you slog for over 6 + 1 + 2 years minimum, and at the end of it all, get a stipend one tenth of what an engineer gets after just a 4-year degree course. There was no comparison.
Somewhere along, thereafter, things changed, with the advent of the Corporates onto the scene, and yes, things may have gone to the other extreme in some cases. But, simultaneously, please also understand that the average life expectancy has gone up considerably. Whereas the common man generally succumbed to heart attacks earlier, today, he lives on with bye-pass surgery becoming far more affordable. And, even as a Wokhardt targets the well-heeled customers, the Narayana Hrudayalaya and its clones are competing for custom from the middle classes and lowering the charges constantly for equally good quality services, but without the frills. I have written more on this at http://health-careless.blogspot.com/2008/02/misconceptions-about-corporate.html
And, more importantly, medicine is beginning to get acceptance as a preferred career choice amongst the youth. And, in my opinion, as noble or ignoble as any other profession.
And, as for the poor, this experience narrated to me by a youngster (click on: http://health-careless.blogspot.com/2006/12/not-for-poor-only-for-desperate.html ) should explain the position fairly clearly, apart from the reports appearing in the press with regular periodicity.
I am not saying everything is right the way it is going. There are many course corrections required. But, I think it is evolving, and government could help by playing the role of an effective regulator.
Muralidhar Rao