| Literature DB >> 26911674 |
Shridhar Kadam1, Srinivas Nallala2, Sanjay Zodpey3, Sanghamitra Pati2, Mohammad Akhtar Hussain4, Abhimanyu Singh Chauhan2, Sovesh Das2, Tim Martineau5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An effective health workforce is essential for achieving health-related new Sustainable Development Goals. Odisha, one of the states in India with low health indicators, faces challenges in recruiting and retaining health staff in the public sector, especially doctors. Recruitment, deployment and career progression play an important role in attracting and retaining doctors. We examined the policies on recruitment, deployment and promotion for doctors in the state and how these policies were perceived to be implemented.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26911674 PMCID: PMC4765090 DOI: 10.1186/s12960-016-0103-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Fig. 1Conceptual framework for analysing factors related to recruitment, deployment and promotion of government doctors in Odisha. Source: developed by authors based on McGregor [11]
Summary of findings
| Policy | Implementation and views of the doctors interviewed | Suggestions by doctors interviewed |
|---|---|---|
| Recruitment | ||
| Explicit rules for recruitment done by OPSC for permanent positions. | Recruitment was done as per the set rules. | Continue current recruitment policy through OPSC with more clarity on scoring and ranking system. |
| Deployment | ||
| It is mandatory for each government doctor to serve at least 3 years in the KBK districts. | Out of 56 doctors interviewed from non-KBK districts, 32 (57%) had never worked in KBK districts. | Deployment based on clear and fixed criteria. |
| Incentives | ||
| Monthly hardship allowance of 8 000 Indian Rupees (around 20% of new entrant’s salary) for rural and 4 000 Indian Rupees for urban areas in KBK districts. | All the doctors interviewed from the KBK district were receiving hardship allowance. However, they perceived it as insufficient and ineffective. | Hardship allowance in proportion with degree of remoteness and linked with performance. |
| Promotion: | ||
| State-level Departmental Promotion Committee that is independent of DOHFW is constituted to look after the promotions of doctors. | Around half the doctors interviewed were aware about the rules and process of promotion. | The criteria for promotion should include numbers of years’ service in rural area and performance in addition to length of service and OPSC ranking. |
Posting and length of service of study participants working in remote (KBK districts) and non-remote (non-KBK districts)
| Sl. no. | Non-KBK district interviewees |
| KBK district interviewees |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 | Started service in KBK | 17 (30%) | Started service in KBK | 22 (73%) |
| 1.2 | Started service in non-KBK | 39 (70%) | Started service in non-KBK | 8 (27%) |
| 2.1 | Served some time in KBK | 24 (43%) | Served some time in non-KBK | 15 (50%) |
| 2.2 | Never served in KBK | 32 (57%) | Never served in non-KBK | 15 (50%) |
| 3.1 | Average length of service | 21.4 years | Average length of service | 20.4 years |
| 3.2 | Average service duration in KBK | 2.5 years | Average service duration in KBK | 13.7 years |
| 3.3 | Average service duration in non-KBK | 18.9 years | Average service duration in non-KBK | 6.7 years |