HEALTH COMMITTEES
MR.ANANDA.S
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSING
YENEPOYA NURSING COLLEGE
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
At the end of the class the student will be able
to-
Explain in details about various committees
and their recommendation
HEALTH COMMITTEES
• The guide-lines for national health planning
were provided by a various committees of
experts have been appointed by the
Government of India from time to time to
review the existing health situation and
recommend measures for further action.
The important committees are
• Bhore Committee, 1946
• Mudaliar Committee, 1962
• Chadah Committee, 1963
• Mukerji Committee, 1965
• Mukerji Committee, 1966
• Jungalwalla Committee, 1967
• Kartar Singh Committee, 1973
• Shrivastav Committee, 1975
• Rural health scheme, 1977
Bhore Committee, 1946
• The Government of India in 1943 appointed
the Health Survey and Development
Committee with Sir Joseph Bhore as Chairman
, Popularly known as Bhore Committee
• To survey the then existing position regarding
the health conditions and health organization
in the country, and to make recommendations
for the future development.
• Committee members met regularly for 2 years
and submitted in 1946 its famous report
which runs into 4 volumes.
• The Committee put forward, for the first time,
comprehensive proposals for the
development of a national programme of
health services for the country.
Recommendations
1. Integration of preventive and curative services
at all administration level
2. Development of Primary health centres in 2
stages.
• In short-term measure
PHC in rural area should include population of
40,000 with a secondary health centre to
serve as a supervisory, coordinating and
referral institution.
For each PHC,
2 Medical Officer
4 Public Health Nurses
1 Nurse
4 Midwives
4 Trained Dais
2 Sanitary Inspectors
2 Health Assistants
1 Pharmacist
15 Other Class Iv Employees
• long-term programme (also called
the 3 million plan)
Setting up primary health units with 75-bedded
hospitals for each 10,000 to 20,000 population
and secondary units with 650-bedded hospitals,
and district hospitals with 2,500 beds
3 ) Major changes in medical education which
includes 3 month's training in preventive and
social medicine to prepare "social physicians".
Mudaliar Committee, 1962
• In 1959, the Government of India appointed
another Committee known as "Health Survey
and Planning Committee", popularly known as
the Mudaliar Committee
• Dr. A.L. Mudaliar as Chairman -to survey the
progress made in the field of health since
submission of the Bhore Committee's Report and
to make recommendations for future
development and expansion of health services.
• The Mudaliar Committee found the quality of
services provided by the primary health
centres inadequate,
• Advised strengthening of the existing primary
health centres before new centres were
established.
• It also advised strengthening of subdivisional
and district hospitals - function as referral
centres
Recommendations
• Consolidate advances : first 2 five year plans
• Strengthen District Hospitals: specialists
• Each PHC not more than 40,000
• Improve quality in PHC
• Integrate medical and health services
• Constitution of All India Health Services
Chadah Committee, 1963
• In 1963, a Committee was appointed by the
Government of India, under the Chairmanship
of Dr. M.S. Chadah, the then Director General
of health Services to study the arrangements
necessary for the maintenance phase of the
National Malaria Eradication Programme.
RECOMMENDATIONS
• "Vigilance" operations in respect of the NMEP
should be the responsibility of the general health
services
• “ Malaria Vigilance operations through monthly
home visits should be implemented by basic
health workers.
• One basic health worker per 10,000 population
• BHW to serve as MPHW for family planning
and vital statistics and malaria vigilance.
• FPHA to supervise 3-4 BHW
Mukerji committee, 1965
 Within a couple of years of implementation
of the Chadah Committee's recommendations
by some states,
 it was realised that the basic health workers
could not function effectively as multipurpose
workers.
 So, malaria operations and family planning
programme suffered
• This subject came up for discussion at a
meeting of the Central Health Council in 1965
• Set up a committee known as "Mukerji
Committee, 1965" under the Chairmanship of
Shri Mukerji, was appointed to review the
strategy for the family planning programme.
Recommendations
• The Committee recommended separate staff for
the family planning programme.
• The family planning assistants were to undertake
family planning duties only.
• The basic health workers were to be utilized for
purposes other than family planning.
• The Committee also recommended to delink the
malaria activities from family planning
The recommendations were accepted by the
Government of India.
Mukerji committee, 1966
• As the states were finding it difficult to take
over the whole burden of the maintenance
phase of malaria.
• Other mass programmes like family planning,
smallpox, leprosy, trachoma, etc. due to
paucity of funds,
• This matter came up for discussion at a
meeting of the Central Council of Health held
in Bangalore in 1966.
• The Council recommended that these and
related questions may be examined by a
committee of Health Secretaries, under the
Chairmanship, Shri Mukerji.
• The Committee worked out the details of the
BASIC HEALTH SERVICE
• Recommended basic health service at PHC
Level
Jungalwalla committee, 1967
• The Central Council of Health at its meeting held
in Srinagar in 1964.
• Taking note of the importance and urgency of
integration of health services, and elimination
of private practice by government doctors,
appointed a Committee known as the
"Committee on Integration of Health Services“
under the Chairmanship of Dr. N. Jungalwalla,
 To examine the various problems including those
of service conditions and submit a report to the
Central Government in the light of these
considerations.
The report was submitted in 1967.
• The Committee defined "integrated health
services" as:
(i) a service with a unified approach for all
problems instead of a segmented approach for
different problems; and
(ii) medical care of the sick and conventional
public health programmes functioning under a
single administrator
• The Committee recommended integration
from the highest to the lowest level in the
services, organization and personnel.
RECOMMENDATIONS
 Unified cadre
Common seniority
Recognize extra qualifications
Equal pay for equal work
Special pay for specialized work
No private practice and good service condition
Kartar Singh committee, 1973
• The Government of India constituted a
Committee in 1972 known as "The Committee
on Multipurpose Workers under Health and
Family Planning" under the Chairmanship of
Kartar Singh,
 To study and make recommendation on :
(a) the structure for integrated services at the
peripheral and supervisory levels;
(b) the feasibility of having multipurpose, bi-
purpose workers in the field:
(c) the training requirements for such workers;
and
(d) the utilization of mobile service units set up
under family planning programme
The Committee submitted its report in
September 1973.
Recommendations
• (a)Present Auxiliary Nurse Midwives to be
replaced by the newly designated "Female
Health Workers", and the present-day Basic
Health Workers, Malaria Surveillance
Workers, Vaccinators, Health Education
Assistants and the Family Planning Health
Assistants to be replaced by "Male Health
Workers".
• (b) The Programme for having multipurpose
workers to be first introduced in areas where
malaria is in maintenance phase and
smallpox has been controlled.
• (c) For proper coverage, there should be one
primary health centre for a population of
50,000
• (d) Each primary health centre should be
divided into 16 sub-centres each having a
population of about 3,000 to 3,500.
• (e) Each sub-centre to be staffed by a team of
one male and one female health worker
• (f) There should be a male health supervisor to
supervise the work of 3 to 4 male health
workers; and a female health supervisor to
supervise the work of 4 female health workers
• (g) The present-day lady health visitors to be
designated as female health supervisors and
• (h) The doctor in charge of a primary health
centre should have the overall charge of all the
supervisors and health workers in his area.
• The recommendations of the Kartar Singh
Committee were accepted by the Government
of India to be implemented during the Fifth
Five year Plan.(1974 -1979)
Shrivastav committee, 1975
• The Government of India in the Ministry of
Health and Family Planning in November
1974 set up a 'Group on Medical Education
and Support Manpower' popularly known as
the Shrivastav Committee.
(1) to devise a suitable curriculum for training a
cadre of health assistants
(2) to suggest steps for improving the existing
medical educational processes
• The Group submitted its report in April 1975.
• ( 1) Creation of bands of para-professional and
semi-professional health workers from within
the community itself (e.g., school teachers,
postmasters, gram sevaks) to provide simple,
promotive, preventive and curative health
services.
• (2) Establishment of 2 cadres of health workers,
namely - multipurpose health workers and
health assistants between the community level
workers and doctors at the PHC;
RECOMMENDATIONS
• (3) Development of a 'Referral Services
Complex.
• (4) Establishment of a Medical and Health
Education Commission for planning and
implementing the reforms needed in health
and medical education
Rural health scheme, 1977
• The most important recommendation of the
Shrivastav Committee was that primary health
care should be provided within the
community itself through specially trained
workers
• The basic recommendations of the Committee
were accepted by the Government in 1977
• which led to the launching of the Rural Health
Scheme
• The programme of training of community
health workers was initiated during 1977-78.
• Steps were also initiated
• (a) involvement of medical colleges in the total
health care of selected PHCs with the objective
of reorienting medical education to the needs of
rural people; and
(b) reorientation training of multipurpose
workers engaged in the control of various
communicable disease programmes.
RECAPITULATION
1. The Bhore committee is also known as ………………
2. The Mudaliar committee is also known
as……………………
3. The Rural health scheme was introduce in the year
…………………….
4. The kartar Singh committee was appointed in the
year …………

Health committees anand

  • 1.
    HEALTH COMMITTEES MR.ANANDA.S ASSISTANT PROFESSOR COMMUNITYHEALTH NURSING YENEPOYA NURSING COLLEGE
  • 2.
    LEARNING OBJECTIVES At theend of the class the student will be able to- Explain in details about various committees and their recommendation
  • 3.
    HEALTH COMMITTEES • Theguide-lines for national health planning were provided by a various committees of experts have been appointed by the Government of India from time to time to review the existing health situation and recommend measures for further action.
  • 4.
    The important committeesare • Bhore Committee, 1946 • Mudaliar Committee, 1962 • Chadah Committee, 1963 • Mukerji Committee, 1965 • Mukerji Committee, 1966 • Jungalwalla Committee, 1967 • Kartar Singh Committee, 1973 • Shrivastav Committee, 1975 • Rural health scheme, 1977
  • 5.
    Bhore Committee, 1946 •The Government of India in 1943 appointed the Health Survey and Development Committee with Sir Joseph Bhore as Chairman , Popularly known as Bhore Committee • To survey the then existing position regarding the health conditions and health organization in the country, and to make recommendations for the future development.
  • 6.
    • Committee membersmet regularly for 2 years and submitted in 1946 its famous report which runs into 4 volumes. • The Committee put forward, for the first time, comprehensive proposals for the development of a national programme of health services for the country.
  • 7.
    Recommendations 1. Integration ofpreventive and curative services at all administration level 2. Development of Primary health centres in 2 stages. • In short-term measure PHC in rural area should include population of 40,000 with a secondary health centre to serve as a supervisory, coordinating and referral institution.
  • 9.
    For each PHC, 2Medical Officer 4 Public Health Nurses 1 Nurse 4 Midwives 4 Trained Dais 2 Sanitary Inspectors 2 Health Assistants 1 Pharmacist 15 Other Class Iv Employees
  • 10.
    • long-term programme(also called the 3 million plan) Setting up primary health units with 75-bedded hospitals for each 10,000 to 20,000 population and secondary units with 650-bedded hospitals, and district hospitals with 2,500 beds
  • 11.
    3 ) Majorchanges in medical education which includes 3 month's training in preventive and social medicine to prepare "social physicians".
  • 12.
    Mudaliar Committee, 1962 •In 1959, the Government of India appointed another Committee known as "Health Survey and Planning Committee", popularly known as the Mudaliar Committee • Dr. A.L. Mudaliar as Chairman -to survey the progress made in the field of health since submission of the Bhore Committee's Report and to make recommendations for future development and expansion of health services.
  • 13.
    • The MudaliarCommittee found the quality of services provided by the primary health centres inadequate, • Advised strengthening of the existing primary health centres before new centres were established. • It also advised strengthening of subdivisional and district hospitals - function as referral centres
  • 14.
    Recommendations • Consolidate advances: first 2 five year plans • Strengthen District Hospitals: specialists • Each PHC not more than 40,000 • Improve quality in PHC • Integrate medical and health services • Constitution of All India Health Services
  • 15.
    Chadah Committee, 1963 •In 1963, a Committee was appointed by the Government of India, under the Chairmanship of Dr. M.S. Chadah, the then Director General of health Services to study the arrangements necessary for the maintenance phase of the National Malaria Eradication Programme.
  • 16.
    RECOMMENDATIONS • "Vigilance" operationsin respect of the NMEP should be the responsibility of the general health services • “ Malaria Vigilance operations through monthly home visits should be implemented by basic health workers. • One basic health worker per 10,000 population
  • 17.
    • BHW toserve as MPHW for family planning and vital statistics and malaria vigilance. • FPHA to supervise 3-4 BHW
  • 18.
    Mukerji committee, 1965 Within a couple of years of implementation of the Chadah Committee's recommendations by some states,  it was realised that the basic health workers could not function effectively as multipurpose workers.  So, malaria operations and family planning programme suffered
  • 19.
    • This subjectcame up for discussion at a meeting of the Central Health Council in 1965 • Set up a committee known as "Mukerji Committee, 1965" under the Chairmanship of Shri Mukerji, was appointed to review the strategy for the family planning programme.
  • 20.
    Recommendations • The Committeerecommended separate staff for the family planning programme. • The family planning assistants were to undertake family planning duties only. • The basic health workers were to be utilized for purposes other than family planning. • The Committee also recommended to delink the malaria activities from family planning The recommendations were accepted by the Government of India.
  • 21.
    Mukerji committee, 1966 •As the states were finding it difficult to take over the whole burden of the maintenance phase of malaria. • Other mass programmes like family planning, smallpox, leprosy, trachoma, etc. due to paucity of funds, • This matter came up for discussion at a meeting of the Central Council of Health held in Bangalore in 1966.
  • 22.
    • The Councilrecommended that these and related questions may be examined by a committee of Health Secretaries, under the Chairmanship, Shri Mukerji. • The Committee worked out the details of the BASIC HEALTH SERVICE • Recommended basic health service at PHC Level
  • 23.
    Jungalwalla committee, 1967 •The Central Council of Health at its meeting held in Srinagar in 1964. • Taking note of the importance and urgency of integration of health services, and elimination of private practice by government doctors, appointed a Committee known as the "Committee on Integration of Health Services“ under the Chairmanship of Dr. N. Jungalwalla,
  • 24.
     To examinethe various problems including those of service conditions and submit a report to the Central Government in the light of these considerations. The report was submitted in 1967.
  • 25.
    • The Committeedefined "integrated health services" as: (i) a service with a unified approach for all problems instead of a segmented approach for different problems; and (ii) medical care of the sick and conventional public health programmes functioning under a single administrator
  • 26.
    • The Committeerecommended integration from the highest to the lowest level in the services, organization and personnel.
  • 27.
    RECOMMENDATIONS  Unified cadre Commonseniority Recognize extra qualifications Equal pay for equal work Special pay for specialized work No private practice and good service condition
  • 28.
    Kartar Singh committee,1973 • The Government of India constituted a Committee in 1972 known as "The Committee on Multipurpose Workers under Health and Family Planning" under the Chairmanship of Kartar Singh,
  • 29.
     To studyand make recommendation on : (a) the structure for integrated services at the peripheral and supervisory levels; (b) the feasibility of having multipurpose, bi- purpose workers in the field: (c) the training requirements for such workers; and (d) the utilization of mobile service units set up under family planning programme The Committee submitted its report in September 1973.
  • 30.
    Recommendations • (a)Present AuxiliaryNurse Midwives to be replaced by the newly designated "Female Health Workers", and the present-day Basic Health Workers, Malaria Surveillance Workers, Vaccinators, Health Education Assistants and the Family Planning Health Assistants to be replaced by "Male Health Workers".
  • 31.
    • (b) TheProgramme for having multipurpose workers to be first introduced in areas where malaria is in maintenance phase and smallpox has been controlled. • (c) For proper coverage, there should be one primary health centre for a population of 50,000
  • 32.
    • (d) Eachprimary health centre should be divided into 16 sub-centres each having a population of about 3,000 to 3,500. • (e) Each sub-centre to be staffed by a team of one male and one female health worker • (f) There should be a male health supervisor to supervise the work of 3 to 4 male health workers; and a female health supervisor to supervise the work of 4 female health workers
  • 33.
    • (g) Thepresent-day lady health visitors to be designated as female health supervisors and • (h) The doctor in charge of a primary health centre should have the overall charge of all the supervisors and health workers in his area.
  • 34.
    • The recommendationsof the Kartar Singh Committee were accepted by the Government of India to be implemented during the Fifth Five year Plan.(1974 -1979)
  • 35.
    Shrivastav committee, 1975 •The Government of India in the Ministry of Health and Family Planning in November 1974 set up a 'Group on Medical Education and Support Manpower' popularly known as the Shrivastav Committee. (1) to devise a suitable curriculum for training a cadre of health assistants (2) to suggest steps for improving the existing medical educational processes
  • 36.
    • The Groupsubmitted its report in April 1975.
  • 37.
    • ( 1)Creation of bands of para-professional and semi-professional health workers from within the community itself (e.g., school teachers, postmasters, gram sevaks) to provide simple, promotive, preventive and curative health services. • (2) Establishment of 2 cadres of health workers, namely - multipurpose health workers and health assistants between the community level workers and doctors at the PHC; RECOMMENDATIONS
  • 38.
    • (3) Developmentof a 'Referral Services Complex. • (4) Establishment of a Medical and Health Education Commission for planning and implementing the reforms needed in health and medical education
  • 39.
    Rural health scheme,1977 • The most important recommendation of the Shrivastav Committee was that primary health care should be provided within the community itself through specially trained workers • The basic recommendations of the Committee were accepted by the Government in 1977 • which led to the launching of the Rural Health Scheme
  • 40.
    • The programmeof training of community health workers was initiated during 1977-78. • Steps were also initiated • (a) involvement of medical colleges in the total health care of selected PHCs with the objective of reorienting medical education to the needs of rural people; and (b) reorientation training of multipurpose workers engaged in the control of various communicable disease programmes.
  • 41.
    RECAPITULATION 1. The Bhorecommittee is also known as ……………… 2. The Mudaliar committee is also known as…………………… 3. The Rural health scheme was introduce in the year ……………………. 4. The kartar Singh committee was appointed in the year …………