Parallel Systems and Human Resource Management in India's Public Health Services : A View from the Front Lines
Keywords
HEALTH SERVICEHEALTH CENTERS
ECONOMIC POLICIES
RURAL AREAS
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
GOOD GOVERNANCE
MINISTRY OF HEALTH
INSURANCE SCHEMES
PRIVATE HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH COMMITTEES
LEADERSHIP
THEFT
HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
PUBLIC HOSPITALS
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH DELIVERY
HEALTH CARE UTILIZATION
QUALITY CARE
MORBIDITY
CIVIL SOCIETY
INPATIENT CARE
SERVICE PROVISION
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
NURSES
POLICY MAKERS
TRANSPARENCY
POLITICAL LEADERS
HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
DELIVERY SYSTEM
CIVIL SERVANT
NURSING
PUBLIC SERVICES
MEDICAL SCHOOL
HEALTH INSURANCE
POLITICIANS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
PUBLIC PROVIDERS
ANTI-CORRUPTION
HEALTH CARE SERVICES
RURAL HEALTH CARE
PUBLIC SERVICE
HEALTH PLANS
ACCOUNTABILITY
POLITICIAN
MINISTER
PATIENT
POLITICAL SUPPORT
DELIVERY OF HEALTH SERVICES
CAPACITY BUILDING
QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH
DECISION MAKING
SPOUSE
MARITAL STATUS
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
URBAN CENTERS
HEALTH FINANCING
COUNSELING
POLICY DISCUSSIONS
NURSE
HEALTH CARE DELIVERY
LOCAL COMMUNITY
HEALTH CARE FACILITIES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
VICTIMS
URBAN AREAS
PRIVATE CARE
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
BASIC SERVICES
DISEASES
PRIMARY CARE
EVALUATION TECHNIQUES
PLACE OF RESIDENCE
POLLUTION
PUBLIC SPENDING
KICKBACKS
POLICY RESEARCH
POLITICAL CORRUPTION
PATIENT CHOICE
IMMUNIZATION
OUTPATIENT CARE
ECONOMIC REVIEW
PROGRESS
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
ACCOUNTABILITIES
HEALTH SERVICE DELIVERY
CITIZEN
HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
POLITICAL LEADER
INFORMAL SECTOR
INTERNAL MIGRATION
STATE GOVERNMENT
PSYCHOLOGY
CONFIDENCE
HEALTH SYSTEM
PRIVATE SECTORS
NATIONAL HEALTH
SANCTIONS
HEALTH SYSTEMS
POLITICAL PARTIES
HEALTH DELIVERY SYSTEM
QUALITY OF CARE
AGED
POOR HEALTH
CITIZENS
MINORITY
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH AFFAIRS
MINISTRIES OF HEALTH
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
HEALTH OFFICIALS
POLITICAL CHANGE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
HEALTH CENTRES
COLLUSION
ABILITY TO PAY
INCOME
HR
REFORM EFFORT
ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES
SANITATION
MORTALITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
FAMILY WELFARE
PATIENTS
ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISMS
CIVIL SERVANTS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH SERVICES
AUDITOR
HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
SERVICE PROVIDERS
BULLETIN
HEALTH INSURANCE SCHEME
HOSPITALS
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
SPOUSES
PUBLIC OPINION
CRIMINAL LAW
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
FOCUS GROUP DISCUSSIONS
FEMALE LITERACY
RESEARCH METHODS
PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEM
HUMAN RESOURCES
HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITY HEALTH
NATIONAL HEALTH SYSTEMS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PEDIATRICS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PATRONAGE
STATE GOVERNMENTS
PHYSICIANS
DEMOCRACY
SURGERY
MIGRATION
SENSITIVE ISSUES
INTERMEDIARIES
PUBLIC SECTOR
NUTRITION
ASSETS
PUBLIC HEALTH CARE
PROBABILITY
HOSPITAL
POPULAR SUPPORT
CORRUPTION
AUDITORS
PHYSICIAN
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
DELIVERY OF HEALTH CARE
WORKERS
HEALTH INSURANCE SCHEMES
PUBLIC HEALTH WORKERS
PENSIONS
CRIMINAL
SENSITIVE TOPICS
DELIVERY SYSTEMS
DOCTORS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19065Abstract
There is building evidence in India that the delivery of health services suffers from an actual shortfall in trained health professionals, but also from unsatisfactory results of existing service providers working in the public and private sectors. This study focusses on the public sector and examines de facto institutional and governance arrangements that may give rise to well-documented provider behaviors such as absenteeism, which can adversely affect service delivery processes and outcomes. The paper considers four human resource management subsystems: postings, transfers, promotions, and disciplinary practices. The four subsystems are analyzed from the perspective of front line workers, that is, physicians working in rural health care facilities operated by two state governments. Physicians were sampled in one post-reform state that has instituted human resource management reforms and one pre-reform state that has not. The findings are based on quantitative and qualitative measurement. The results show that formal rules are undermined by a parallel modus operandi in which desirable posts are often determined by political connections and side payments. The evidence suggests an institutional environment in which formal rules of accountability are trumped by a parallel set of accountabilities. These systems appear so entrenched that reforms have borne no significant effect.Date
2014-06Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/19065http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19065
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http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Related items
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