Source: TH
Context:
The Indian government has repeatedly cited a 1:1,000 doctor-population ratio as per the World Health Organization (WHO) over the last decade. However, WHO has clarified that it does not prescribe any specific doctor-population ratio at the country level. Ratios should be determined based on national health labour market dynamics and needs.
What WHO Actually Says?
- WHO does not prescribe a universal doctor-population ratio.
- Health workforce norms should be country-specific, based on:
- National health labour market conditions
- Disease burden
- Demographic needs
- Health system capacity
- Training and distribution of health professionals
- Emphasis is on strategic planning, not numerical targets.
Background:
- Parliament records:
- Until 2010: Govt acknowledged no WHO standard exists.
- From 2015 to 2024: Govt cited the 1:1,000 ratio to compare doctor availability.
- In practice:
- Only 80% of allopathic doctors counted as available.
- AYUSH practitioners included fully to meet the benchmark.
- Origin of 1:1,000 figure:
- Likely from Medical Council of India’s Vision 2015 report (2011), based on expert consultation.
- Cross-cited in academic papers, Parliament replies, and government communications without official WHO backing.
India’s Status:
- Doctors per 1,000 population: 0.7 → ranked 118/181 countries.
- Composite figure (doctors + nurses + midwives): 3.06 → below WHO SDG threshold of 4.45 → ranked 122/181 countries.
- Challenges:
- Rural-urban disparities in health workforce distribution.
- Perception of doctor shortage largely influenced by misinterpreted 1:1,000 norm.





