Modern medicine
has progressed tremendously to scale newer heights of diagnostics and
therapeutics. Several surgical, biomedical, bioengineering, pharmaceutical,
biological, nursing and rehabilitation approaches are now available to render
sophisticated treatment options to illnesses. One may postulate that thanks to
globalization of medical knowledge, availability of private investments and the
development of generic pharmaceutical industry, these healthcare options are
accessible, though not either universally or affordably. Even assuming that
these become available and accessible, three factors remain the most critical
ones in making the best use of these options for enabling wellness for the general
population. The first is the hospital infrastructure. The second is the medical
insurance system, The third is the patient and his or her caregivers.
In all the
above, the medical divide is a stark reality that differentiates the developed
economies and the emerging economies and the rich and the poor in the
respective economies. The best of the hospitals and the equipment are
understandably available more in the developed countries. A host of medical
insurance schemes are also well established in the advanced countries. The importance
of nursing and care giving, during illness and in the recovery phase, including
sensitivity to the risks of hospital induced infections is also well understood
in the mature economies. Unfortunately, attention to these is not necessarily a
function of the economic wellbeing of a nation, or vice versa. China and India,
for example, could be amongst the Top 5 economies of the world. It is, however,
unclear if they would be amongst the Top 5 healthcare infrastructures of the
world.
Healthcare constraints
Healthcare is
one of the areas that received amongst the lowest levels of investment in India’s
economic planning. Healthcare has traditionally received no more than 1.5
percent of India’s GDP. This compares adversely with the global median of 5 percent
of the GDP. The healthcare system is burdened by stagnant public health
infrastructure marked by dated equipment, inadequate hospital beds and poor
nursing. As a result, despite the costs
of treatment, even indigent population is forced to depend on the few private
hospitals. At a macro level, a hospital count of 15,000 and a doctor population
of 400,000 is grossly inadequate for a population of 1.2 billion of India which
has additional problems of infant mortality, hunger and malnutrition, poor
sanitation and hygiene, lack of clean water and prevalence of tropical diseases.
Medical insurance
is completely unheard of in the rural areas, where 70 percent of India’s
population lives. Even in urban areas, insurance is inadequate and highly
capped and rarely cashless. The geriatric population which needs the healthcare
insurance disparately has little access to insurance beyond a senior age. Pre-existing
illnesses are often excluded. The Indian patient and the caretaker ecosystem are
also equally affected by the emerging market syndrome of low disease awareness,
poor medical transparency and inability to evaluate options. Lack of centers of
excellence for individual specialties (on the lines of US and Singapore
hospitals) also affects the ability of patient population to reach to the best
option in the least possible time. Most hospitals in India vie to be multi-specialty
hospitals rather than super-specialty hospitals, spreading out investments and
medical attention too thin. All the factors discussed above point to the long
haul that is ahead for the Indian healthcare sector
Will for nil-illness
There is a
great need for a thematic redefinition in the Indian healthcare sector. Just as the industry benefits from thematic
campaigns such as Zero Defects, and demographics are influenced by Single or
Dual Child campaigns, healthcare could benefit from a Will for nil-illness. While
aging and terminal illness are, no doubt, inevitable concomitants of life,
illness can be reduced with conscious effort and deliberate will. That is
because sufficient knowledge on optimal healthcare exists today but deployment
of the knowledge has been anything but patchy. The principal participants in
the Indian healthcare paradigm namely, the governments, the investors, the
hospitals, the insurers, the drug makers and the patients must demonstrate a
strong degree of will to take the healthcare paradigm to the next level. Will
is required because this upgrade requires the participants to consciously move forward
independent of normal metrics such as cost, revenue, profit and occupancy.
Will connotes
the ability to control one’s thoughts and actions in order to achieve what one
wants to achieve; it is a feeling of strong determination to do that particular
thing what one wants to do. Whenever a person or an entity needs to accomplish
something extraordinary, the starting point is neither a plan nor an action,
neither is it a slogan or a credo. The starting point is the will to accomplish
that something extraordinary. Given the state of the Indian healthcare, the
paucity of resources, and the disadvantaged state of Indian patient population
all the stakeholders require a tremendous willpower to lift healthcare to
acceptable limits. Fortunately, there are a few levers that can lead to a
significant boost to the willpower of all the stakeholders. A discussion of the
concept of just the three critical stakeholders - hospitals, doctors and
patients - points to the need for will as the key driver of the healthcare
change in India.
Willpower
for the hospitals
Hospitals serve
as the infrastructure for the noble objective of saving lives and ensuring good
health. It is necessary that hospitals are established and operated to support
the basic objective rather than on profit-driving metrics. India has the most
spaciously designed and luxuriously operated hotels or offices. India is also
home to some of the best Indian factories, in several sectors, automobiles,
pharmaceuticals and white goods, for example. Unfortunately, however, even the
best of the hospitals in even a metropolitan city of India leaves much to be
desired, in terms of designs and layouts. Should the hospital system wait for a
regulatory institution like Indian Hospitals Authority to be set up or it
should, on its own, emerge as the role model of proactive self-development and
self-regulation is a question that should engage all the right-thinking people of
the country. The answer obviously lies in the latter. That’s where the
willpower of the founders and administrators of hospitals and clinics would
count.
To keep the
best hospital practice as an objective far above revenue and profit means that
hospitals need to be designed for the future. The first designs of any hospital
or clinic themselves must provide for well-categorized spaces for outpatient
services, emergency services, intensive care services, room and ward services,
diagnostic services, support services and waiting rooms for each of the above. Hospitals
which are designed like pharmaceutical factories with clean environment for
patient consultation, diagnosis and waiting, and aseptic core for operations
and intensive care are the best bet for promoting patient welfare. It requires
tremendous willpower on the part of founders, investors and administrators of
hospitals and clinics to keep the clean and aseptic conditions in hospital design
and management above any other revenue or profit considerations.
Willpower
for the doctors
Doctors are God’s
instruments to save lives and promote good health. The ratio of doctors to
patient population is extremely unfavorable in India which makes each doctor see
far more patients than he or she could do justice to on any particular day. Not
only that, doctors tend to practice across several hospitals taking away long
hours in commute. It requires tremendous willpower for doctors to spend the
requisite amount of time on each patient in both outpatient and ward stays. A complete
understanding of the patient’s medical history, current medical issues,
diagnostic requirements, analysis of diagnostic results, physical examination,
day to day readouts and general counseling, together with pre-surgical,
surgical and post-surgical actions as well as an appropriate level of enquiry
with, and advisory to, the patient’s caretakers and caregivers constitute the
total doctor-patient interactive requirement. Indian doctors, fighting for every
minute of their time, hardly are able to do justice to the virtuous patient
treatment paradigm that is required for effective healthcare. It requires
tremendous willpower for doctors to preferentially recognize the “care-value”
of time over the “money-value” of time.
When time is
in short supply, doctors need to collaborate with each other to optimize the
time for patients jointly. It is not uncommon for the doctors and surgeons of
different specialties to visit their ward patients at different times, going
through the progress severally and coming up with treatment options from
diverse, and often unconnected, angles. If only doctors and surgeons move as
teams, their own time as well as the patient’s time will be optimized. This
aspect of inter-doctor collaboration, including explicit physician-surgeon
interface as well as a related aspect of inter-hospital networking would go a
long way in conserving time for the time-pressured medical fraternity. This,
however, is easier said than done. It requires a level of will that drives down
individual egos and overcomes professional competitiveness amongst doctors. There
is yet another dimension of will that is relevant; updating themselves
constantly with sophisticated medical and diagnostic equipment, tools and
techniques and the use of information technology for medical care requires even
accomplished doctors to be humble students.
Willpower for
the patients
When the
medical system is inadequate, a large measure of responsibility lies with the
patient himself or herself to be healthy, first of all never to become patient
except by way of destiny. Even genetically predisposed individuals, can adopt
appropriate lifestyle changes in terms of work, stress, diet and exercise to
prevent illness and ensure wellness. Individuals should commit to their and their
families’ health insurance from the beginning of their careers and save also
beyond that to be prepared for critical illnesses. A proactive and preventive
mindset for wellness requires significant willpower at an individual level. The
best of efforts, however, may not prevent illness. While acute illnesses may be
manageable, chronic illnesses such as degenerative Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s
and completely unexpected cardiac attacks and vascular strokes require
tremendous willpower on the part of the patient, and the caretaker group.
The human
body is an amazing creation of the Almighty, which is vulnerable for unanticipated
calamities but also is capable of reconstruction and rejuvenation; the healthy
parts supporting the affected parts to recover. With positive mindset and unswerving
diligence, patients facing chronic diseases can still turn the corner and
become normal or near normal. The Hindu
Business Line in its Weekend Life Feature on August 30, 2013 carried a real
life story titled “A Fresh Innings for Vijay” describing how a middle aged corporate
senior executive afflicted by a sudden stroke worked hard not only to become
normal but also discover new faculties (http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/features/weekend-life/a-fresh-innings-for-vijay/article5068487.ece).
Clearly, conditioned rejuvenation as well as inexplicable miracles are possible
in human medical endeavor. It requires a positive approach and an indomitable
will on the part of individual-patient to regain normalcy, with the support of
the caretaker group comprising the immediate his or her family, friends, caregivers,
colleagues and employer.
Life is
precious that needs to be insulated from illness and reinforced with wellness. For
a healthy life, positive willpower is even more precious.
Posted by Dr
CB Rao on September 1, 2013
1 comment:
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