Can the Delhi Government’s ‘Mohalla’ clinic overcome its challenges and provide quality health services to the urban poor population?

Authors

  • Bhuwan KC School of Pharmacy, Monash University Malaysia, 47500 Bandar Sunway, Selangor Darul Ehsan
  • Pathiyil Ravi Shankar Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Health City University
  • Sunil Shrestha Department of Pharmacy, Nepal Cancer Hospital and Research Centre, Harisiddhi, Lalitpur

Keywords:

Access, Delhi government, health services, 'Mohalla' clinics, urban health

Abstract

 

 The ‘Mohalla’ clinics were set up by the Delhi state (provincial) government in India in 2014 to provide basic health services to people of Delhi city and its vicinity, especially targeting the urban poor. The Mohalla clinics are staffed by a doctor, a nurse, a pharmacist and a laboratory technician and theyprovide basic health services including immunisation, family planning and counselling services. The Mohalla clinic program had a good start and its operation was cost-effective; however, it is still struggling to increase its coverage to entire Delhi state as it had planned. The program got caught up in the central government and state government bureaucratic tussle, especially on the issue of acquiring land for setting up such clinics and on the implementation front due to the lack of operational plan and collaboration with the government line agencies. Thus, despite political will and funding a potentially viable urban health programmay have got stuck in the operational procedural complexities and political-bureaucratic tussle. This commentary article tries to discuss the challenges faced by the Delhi government’s ‘Mohalla’ clinics and a possible way forward to scale it up as a model urban health program.

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Author Biographies

Bhuwan KC, School of Pharmacy, Monash University Malaysia, 47500 Bandar Sunway, Selangor Darul Ehsan

Lecturer

Pathiyil Ravi Shankar, Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Health City University

Professor of Pharmacology

Sunil Shrestha, Department of Pharmacy, Nepal Cancer Hospital and Research Centre, Harisiddhi, Lalitpur

Clinical Pharmacist and Research Associate

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Published

2019-08-07

Issue

Section

Short Communications