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Great Indian health paradox: Surplus doctors, empty hospitals, system in crisis

By Dr. P.K. Gupta*  
India proudly claims a doctor-to-population ratio of 1:811—better than the WHO benchmark of 1:1,000. We have 812 medical colleges churning out over 126,600 MBBS graduates annually. Yet, millions remain without adequate care, while hundreds of thousands of trained doctors and nurses are either unemployed, underemployed, or fleeing abroad.
This is not a shortage of talent. This is a failure of policy, planning, and political will.
The crocodile of unemployment has swallowed the decade-long hard work of medical professionals. Today, an estimated 3–4 lakh doctors are unemployed or underutilised. In states like Uttar Pradesh, regular government recruitment nearly halted between 1990 and 2010. What followed was a toxic cycle of contractual, hourly-paid, benefit-less jobs that offer no professional progression, no security, and no dignity. The Hippocratic Oath takes a backseat when a doctor must first save himself.
The rural-urban chasm is staggering. While 70% of doctors serve just 33% of the population in urban areas, rural community health centres face crippling shortages—83.2% of surgeon positions and 81.6% of paediatrician posts lie vacant. States like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh have doctor-patient ratios as abysmal as 1:2,000, while Goa enjoys 1:353. The public health system, designed for the many, serves only the few.
And yet, we continue to produce more. Over 68,000 Indian-trained doctors now practice in OECD countries. Our medical education system has become a feeder for private healthcare and global markets, not for India's own public needs. The private sector absorbs 65% of doctors, catering to 60% of inpatient and 70% of outpatient care—leaving the poor to fend for themselves.
Nursing tells a similar story. India has 2.74 million nurses and midwives projected, but only 1.41 million are active. High attrition rates of 28–35%, driven by poor pay, brutal work hours, and lack of safety, push nurses abroad or out of the profession. Meanwhile, a deficit of 2 million nurses persists. The WHO recommends 44.5 nurses per 10,000 population; we hover at barely half that.
Dentistry offers the starkest example of oversupply. With 329 dental colleges and nearly 28,000 graduates annually, India already has one dentist for every 3,846 people—double the WHO recommendation. Yet, most new dentists struggle to earn ₹8,000–₹20,000 a month as associates, with little hope of government employment. Quality of education has decayed, and academicians themselves are burnt out and underpaid.
The malaise extends to allied health professions—physiotherapists, pharmacists, speech therapists, lab technicians—where reliable employment data is scarce, and most survive on precarious wages or migrate to better prospects abroad.
What is to be done?
First, we must redraw the human resource and equipment standards that have remained largely unchanged since the Bhore Committee recommendations of 1948. We need State Medical Commissions empowered for real-time, transparent recruitment—not the sporadic, nepotism-tainted processes that dominate today.
Second, permanent government jobs must be created, not contractual dead-ends. Doctors in public service should have clear career progression, with rural service allowances as high as basic pay, housing, and security—especially for women doctors who face heightened risks.
Third, public health capacity must be expanded systematically. States like Andhra Pradesh and Odisha have shown that zero-vacancy policies and human resource management units can reduce rural shortages. These models must be scaled nationally.
Fourth, skill enhancement and re-skilling opportunities should be built into the system, not left to private enterprises that further commodify medical education.
Finally, we must confront the uncomfortable truth: we are producing doctors for the private sector and the world, not for India's villages and its poor. Until we align our medical education and workforce planning with public health needs, the paradox will persist—surplus doctors, empty hospitals, and a people left behind.
The problem is not the absence of doctors. It is the absence of will. And the clock is ticking.
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