PLOS Global Public Health (Jan 2023)

Pioneering family physicians and the mechanisms for strengthening primary health care in India—A qualitative descriptive study

  • Archna Gupta,
  • Ramakrishna Prasad,
  • Sunil Abraham,
  • Nisanth Menon Nedungalaparambil,
  • Megan Landes,
  • Carolyn Steele Gray,
  • Sanjeev Sridharan,
  • Onil Bhattacharyya

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 6

Abstract

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India has one of the most unequal healthcare systems globally, lagging behind its economic development. Improved primary care and primary health care play an integral role in overcoming health disparities. Family medicine is a subset of primary care—delivered by family physicians, characterized by comprehensive, continuous, coordinated, collaborative, personal, family and community-oriented services—and may be able to fill these gaps. This research aims to understand the potential mechanisms by which family physicians can strengthen primary health care. In this qualitative descriptive study, we interviewed twenty family physicians, identified by purposeful and snowball sampling, who are among the first family physicians in India who received accredited certification in FM and were identified as pioneers of family medicine. We used the Contribution of Family Medicine to Strengthening Primary Health Care Framework to understand the potential mechanisms by which family medicine strengthens primary health care. Iterative inductive techniques were used for analysis. This research identifies multiple ways family physicians can strengthen primary health care in India. They are skilled primary care providers and support mid and low-level health care providers’ ongoing training and capacity building. They develop relationships with specialists, ensure appropriate referral systems are in place, and, when necessary, work with governments and organizations to access the essential resources needed to deliver care. They motivate the workforce and change how care is delivered by ensuring providers’ skills match the needs of communities and engage communities as partners in healthcare delivery. These findings highlight multiple mechanisms by which family physicians strengthen primary health care. Investments in postgraduate training in family medicine and integrating family physicians into the primary care sector, particularly the public sector, could address health disparities.