Key Points

Tamil Nadu's healthcare system is facing a critical challenge with severe doctor shortages and significant salary disparities. The Legal Coordination Committee for Government Doctors has appealed to the World Health Organisation to intervene and help address these pressing issues. Despite achieving impressive healthcare milestones like early reduction in maternal mortality, the state's doctors are experiencing extremely difficult working conditions. The situation threatens the sustainability of Tamil Nadu's public healthcare system and requires immediate attention from state and international authorities.

Key Points: Tamil Nadu Doctors Urge WHO to Address Healthcare Crisis

  • TN achieves early WHO health goals despite severe doctor shortages
  • Significant pay gap between state and national doctor salaries
  • Doctors face alarmingly low life expectancy compared to population average
  • Healthcare system struggling with recruitment and retention challenges
2 min read

TN doctors urge WHO to intervene on staffing and pay disparities

TN doctors appeal to WHO over critical staffing shortages, salary disparities, and challenging working conditions in state healthcare system

"This crisis impacts not only doctors but also the general public - Perumal Pillai, LCC President"

Chennai, May 20

The Legal Coordination Committee for Government Doctors (LCC), a Tamil Nadu-based organisation, has appealed to the World Health Organisation (WHO) to intervene and urge the State government to address persistent issues of staff shortages and salary disparities affecting government doctors.

In a letter to Dr. Roderico H. Ofrin, the WHO Representative to India, LCC president Perumal Pillai acknowledged Tamil Nadu's notable achievements in public healthcare, particularly in reducing maternal and infant mortality rates - milestones that align with WHO's Sustainable Development Goals.

The State, with a population exceeding 80 million, has already achieved a maternal mortality rate (MMR) of 39 per one lakh live births - a target the WHO set for 2030, attained by Tamil Nadu a decade early.

The representation also noted the State's advances in rural healthcare delivery and non-communicable disease management.

However, the LCC president highlighted that these successes have come at a heavy cost to the medical personnel who made them possible.

The organisation expressed alarm over inadequate recruitment in public hospitals, resulting in overburdened doctors and strained healthcare delivery.

"This crisis impacts not only doctors but also the general public," the letter stated.

The LCC pointed out that government doctors in Tamil Nadu receive some of the lowest salaries in the country. It cited a pay gap of nearly Rs 40,000 between MBBS doctors in Tamil Nadu and their counterparts in other States.

Despite recommendations from the National Medical Commission to ensure parity with doctors in central institutions such as AIIMS, and a Tamil Nadu High Court directive upholding Government Order 354, which mandates salary revisions, the State government has failed to implement the necessary changes, the organisation alleged.

Of further concern, the LCC claimed that government doctors in Tamil Nadu face one of the highest early mortality rates in the country.

While the average life expectancy of the general population is estimated between 69 and 72 years, the life expectancy of government doctors reportedly ranges between 55 and 59 years.

Citing these concerns, the LCC urged the WHO to impress upon the Tamil Nadu government the urgent need to address staffing shortfalls and enforce fair pay structures as per national guidelines and existing legal orders.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the article:
R
Rajesh K.
This is shocking! Tamil Nadu has achieved so much in healthcare but is failing its own doctors. How can we expect quality treatment when doctors are overworked and underpaid? The state government must act immediately. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
As someone from Chennai, I've seen government doctors work tirelessly during COVID. It's shameful that they get lower salaries than other states despite TN's better healthcare outcomes. WHO intervention might be needed since our own system isn't fixing this.
S
Sanjay V.
The life expectancy statistic is heartbreaking. Doctors saving lives are losing years of their own. This isn't just about salaries - it's about basic dignity. Hope WHO takes serious note. #RespectDoctors
A
Ananya R.
While I support doctors' demands, going to WHO seems extreme. Shouldn't we solve our internal matters within India first? Maybe central government mediation would be better than involving international bodies.
K
Karthik B.
TN govt spends crores on freebies but can't pay doctors properly? Irony died a thousand deaths! These are the people actually making difference in lives of poor. Shame on administration 😡
M
Meena S.
My daughter is studying MBBS and this news worries me. Why would anyone want to serve in government hospitals with such conditions? Brain drain will increase if this continues. Need better policies ASAP!

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