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accidents and injuries through appropriate health communication, technologies and
care provision.
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To denote this important policy change, facilities which start providing the larger
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Increasingly medical practice is coming under intense scrutiny as to what is appropriate and affordable care, including serious considerations of patient safety issues and protection. Medical professionalism must be consciously adhered to as we try and find the best health care for our patients at the best value and outcomes for our patients themselves, and also for society at large. In view of escalating health care costs, physician autonomy to practice as he or she likes or deems fit has now come under siege with more and more performance monitoring, not just for appropriateness, but also for outcomes, necessity and cost-effectiveness. Physician' vested interests must be tempered with evidence-based benefits or at least be associated with no increase in harm or incur affordability issues. Fraudulent physician malfeasance are now being uncovered via whistle-blowers, or through greater more meticulous audit of various validated performance measures, and those physicians found to have flouted these due to pecuniary self-interests, overuse of tests or procedures have been found guilty and sanctioned with heavy fines, return of reimbursements as well as imprisonment, and erasure from medical registries and the removal of license to practice.
Primary Health Care to CPHC
Primary care has been very selective in the past, covering less than 20% of primary
health care needs. This has made primary care less responsive to felt health care
needs and created the image of the under-performing system.
Primary Health Care is necessarily comprehensive- addressing primary care for all of
reproductive and child health, communicable, and non-communicable diseases and
accidents and injuries through appropriate health communication, technologies and
care provision.
Comprehensive primary health care package will also include nutrition, geriatric health
care, palliative care and rehabilitative care services.
To denote this important policy change, facilities which start providing the larger
package of comprehensive primary health care will be called Health and Wellness
centers.
The Coronavirus crisis has highlighted new challenges that healthcare professionals are facing. Hence, there is need to upskill and reskill to stay competitive in a changing world, says SACHIN GUPTA
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Towards a World Class University
1. Towards a World Class
Medical Sciences University
Prof. S. A. Tabish
FRCP, FACP, FAMS, FRCPE,
MD HA (AIIMS), MBBS, FRIPH (London)
Fellowship University of Bristol, England
Doctorate in Educational Leadership (USA)
2. Transforming
the face of
medical
education
We focus on a University, to give the
teaching & research a real world context
in the social, economic and political
environment across the globe.
We will prepare students to become
leaders in any setting. The University
will provide a quality education that
effectively integrates critical thinking,
problem-solving and leadership skills.
The University will achieve its
mission by striving for excellence in
education, service and research.
3. New Horizons in Medical Education
CHALLENGES
Patients as Consumers/Patient’s Expectations
Healthcare Delivery a top priority
Medical Knowledge Explosion & Technological Advances
Doctor’s availability & Workload
Student’s Requirements
RESPONSE
The Development of New Curricula
The Introduction of New Learning Situations & Use of New Tools & Aids
to Learning
Introduction of New Methods of Assessment
Importance of Staff Development Structures
Medical Education must respond to the context in which it operates
4. NEW TRENDS
Outcome-based Education
Cost-effectiveness of approaches to Teaching & Learning
The Introduction of New Learning Technologies
Choice of Educational Strategies
Approaches to Assessment
Staff Development & Professionalism
Best Evidence Medical Education
ACADEMIC STANDARDS
Standards for Teaching operate as Benchmarks
Broaden the definition of Scholarship of Discovery, Application,
Integration & Teaching
5. Model for Change
Establish a sense of Urgency
Create the Guiding Coalition
Develop a Vision & Strategy
Communicate the Change Vision
Empower Broad-Based Action
Generate Short-term Wins
Consolidate gains & produce more Change
Anchor New Approaches in the Culture
6. Passion for a Better World
The six
priority
areas that
span the full
breadth of
the
University:
Discovery Science: Transforming our world through fundamental
scientific research
Health of the Planet: Addressing critical environmental and
sustainability challenges facing humankind
Human Health: Defining the future of health through advances from
bench to bedside across a broad range of disciplines
Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Accelerating the journey from
idea to impact
Teaching, Learning, and Living: Reimagining education for the
21st-century learner
The Core: Attracting extraordinary students and faculty and providing
them with the resources they need to thrive
7. Medical Education:
Ultimate Aim is to
Supply
Society with a
knowledgeabl
e skilled and
up-to-date
cadre of
professionals
who put
patient care
above self
interest
Undertak
e to
maintain
& develop
their
expertise
over the
course of
lifelong
career
Medicine has
a privileged
position in
the society,
&, as a result,
medical
education is
itself set
apart from
the main
body of
higher
education
Medical
Education is
in a
perpetual
state of
unrest
8. Quality in Medical Education
High Quality
medical
education is a
vital prerequisite
for high quality
patient care
CQI is the
responsibility
of all
academic
administrators
Quality
Improvement is a
dynamic &
continuous
process whose
aim is the
achievement of
excellence
9. Action Plan to make this University a high-ranked University
A Multi-layered & Multidimensional Approach
Make significant
contributions to
the advancement
of knowledge
through research
10. A New Vision...
A New
Approach...
Components
World Class
University:
Academic
Reputation
Research
Citations per
faculty
Ratio of
academic
staff to
students
Establishing Centres of Excellence
- Cardiac, Neuro, Renal & Endocrine
Sciences, Imaging, ART, Oncology,
Aesthetic & Reconstructive Surgery, Mol
Medicine, - Transplant Surgery
- Lifestyle Disease
- Disruptive technologies, Robotics,
Ageing populations
- Info & Commun Tech [m-Health]
- Health Economics, - Health policy
- R&D (Drug Discovery, Nanotechnology)
- Nursing - Dental
Integrated Medicine [AYUSH]
University Needs:
A combination of
freedom, autonomy &
leadership.
An environment that
fosters
competitiveness,
unrestrained scientific
inquiry, critical
thinking, innovation
and creativity
Hire the best scholars
and put them in
positions of power
Control quality through
hiring panels
For Board Council: only
choose people who are
deemed to be good for
the university
11. Provide
means for
colleges/depa
rtments to
acquire and
manage
finances,
facilities, and
information
resources
they need
Provide
appealing,
safe, healthy,
and
sustainable
physical
environment
that supports
teaching and
research
mission
Provide highst
quality service
at efficient cost,
in timely
manner, and
maximize long-
term value of
university
investments to
ensure
stakeholders
achieve
goals/objectives
of the
institution
Provide high
quality of
work life for
all employees
regardless of
position or
function,
including
opportunities
for individual
development
Promote Uni
values
aligned with
the broader
community to
ensure
common
purpose and
agreement
for university
mission
Mission
12. Articulate a clear
vision, mission and
values
Clearly defined
roles and
responsibilities
Communicate a
coherent institutional
stewardship
philosophy
Promote an
environment of
innovation and
creativity
Value people
and reward
them
Accountability
Transparency
Responsiveness
Credibility
Value a culture that
has measurable goals
and objectives –
outcome oriented
Promote intra-
campus
cooperation and
teamwork
ACCREDITATION
Model to
achieve
excellence
13.
14. • Population of only 1.3
billion, 27 States & 7
union territories
• Vast Population (80%)
spread in remote areas
in around 627,000
villages
• 8O % of super-specialty
hospitals are in big
cities
INDIA – THE LAND OF DIVERSITY
15. Health Care Facilities In India
PUBLIC SECTOR: 12760 Hospitals, > 5000 CHCs, > 25000 PHCs, 0.15 m Sub-
Health Centres
PRIVATE SECTOR: Provides 80% of the care
Medical Institutions: 539; Dental Institutions: 313 Pharmacy Colleges: 5906
Nursing Colleges/Schools: 8770; Allied & Healthcare Institutions: over 1400
Key issue: lack of access to timely HC & shortage of
specialists; one third of cardiac pts die due to late diagnosis; half of
the diabetics go un-diagnosed
103% population of world holds a mobile cellular
subscription
Half of the world lacks access to essential health services
5 Billion people do not have access to Surgical &
Anesthesia care when needed
16. Quantum of Disease Burden:
What we are expected to handle?
Total estimated workforce in India is 65 lacs excluding
ASHA – [11.5 lac docs, 2.54 lac dental pract, 7.99 AYUSH
practitioners, 29.09 lakh nurses, 11.25 pharmacists, 9.7
lakh ASHA, AN/HPS 10 lakhs; TOTAL 80 lakhs]
17.5 m people die each year in India from cardiovascular dis - 74% of urban Indians are at risk
of CVDs
NCDs – 72.5% deaths worldwide (6 M deaths in 2016); 61% deaths in India; over 3 m suffer from
cancer
India is emerging as diabetic capital of the world - 70 m living with diabetes; 1 m deaths in
India in 2016
Trauma & Accidents - over 0.5 m RTAs
Mental Health neglected for far too long
6 crore Indians fall below poverty line every year due to catastrophic health expenditure
17. Human Resource in the changing
World: Future Trends
We will need 18 million health workers more in
2030
Consider the labour market dynamics &
education policies
Building the capacity of institutions
Skills & competencies - entrepreneurial, STEM,
risk management, digital, leadership, creativity &
innovation, emotional intelligence, problem
solving
Invest in ‘real’ reality & human intelligence
18. Emerging Allied & HC
Professions:
Taking Health & Wellness to every doorstep
Behavioual Health Sciences- Psychologist, Beh Analyst
Integrated Behavioural Health Counsellor, Mental H Supp.
Cardiology, vascular, neurosciences & pulmonary technology
Health & Information Management
Life Sciences- Biotechnologist, Biochemist, Mol Biologist,
Molecular Geneticist, Ecologist, Biomed Engineering, Biomed
Equipment Tech, Occupational health, Safety & Env Protec
Officers
Med Lab Sciences Tech - Cytology Tech, Forensic Sciences,
Histology, Hematology
Medical Radiology, imaging & therapeutic technology - Med
Physics, Nuclear Med Technologist, Radiotherapy
19. Emerging Allied & HC Professions
(contd.)
Nutrition Science - nutritionist, dietician
Occupational therapy
Ophthalmic sciences
Physician Associate & Assistant
Physiotherapy
Primary/Community health promoters/MPW
Renal Technology
Surgical & Anesthesia related Technicians -
Endoscopy & Laparoscopy
Trauma & Burn care
Emergency Medical Technician
20. Emerging cadres of hope
Doctor: WHO Norm 1/1000
[Status:0.7]
Nurse: WHO Norm 3/1000
[Status:1.7]
Pharmacist Need based [0.5/1000]
Physician Assistant - work in tertiary
care institutions, Surgical Assistants
Nurse Practitioner provides PHC &
implements National Program
21. HC Sector to drive 21st century Economy
Health Care: 8 Trillion USD
Food & Agri: 8T USD
IT: 3.4 T USD
Oil & Nat Gas: 2 T USD
Automobile: 2 T USD
Media: 1.7 T USD
Energy: 1.4 T USD
Apparel: 1.4 T USD
22. Funding
Making the university
sustainable
Revenue Generation
Four main streams of funding
State Funding
Operational
Expenditure
and Research
Partnerships
Strong
relationships &
partnerships with
public and private
organisations
which manifest
through the
funding of
‘contract
research’
Donations
Relationship
with Alumni &
stakeholders
with regards to
the receipt of
endowments
and gift
payments.
Fees
Income
generated
from tuition
fees.
Operations
& Research
Salary and
Infrastructure
23. Medical Education: Doctor of the Future
A Caregiver
Compassion and
Empathy
Communicator
• Doctor-Patient
Relationship
• Interpersonal
communication
Decision Maker
• Needs Assessment
• Healthcare
Delivery
Community Leader
• Disease Prevention
• Health Promotion
• Medical Care
A Good Manager
• Managing materials
• Human Resource
management
• Patient Safety
Preparing Future
Doctors
• Accountability
• Creative Autonomy
• Quality
24. Staff Development: A journey, not a
destination
Faculty
Roles - Teacher
- Curriculum
planner
- Evaluator
- Educational
leader
- Scholar
Administrator
- Researcher
Staff
Development
- Formal
- Learning on the job
- Belonging to a
community of
educators
- Mentorship
- Role modelling
- Organisational
support
- Development
Staff development
activities should be
guided by knowledge
of cor competencies
Content
Promotion of
scholarship
-
Organisation
al change &
development
25. Develop a clear
educational philosophy
and intention and
focus administrative
resources on creating
an educationally rich
environment.
Make
progress
visible and
compelling
Design a
strong
infrastruc
ture
Apply the
habits of
academic
entreprene
urship
Approach
administr
ation as a
scholarly
act
Support
the
people
doing the
work
Core
Principles
27. Exceptional Governance: Intelligent Direction
Make this university
an intellectual
destination & a
transformative
educational hub
through ideas that
challenge & change
the world.
Focus on
Groundbreaking
Research
1. Journey from Good to Great, from
Smart to Wise, future-focused and
process-focused by providing
exceptional governance
2. Moving from survival to stability to
success to significance.
I will set up direction, with innovative
vision, align people to vision, set
goals, motivate and inspire, provide
total quality leadership
Engage in exploring
the Universe: our
researchers & their
discoveries will
invigorate the
Healthcare, advance
industry, and influence
the international
scientific agenda to
expand the reach of
science.
We should be rated among the top Universities
in the world for the quality and breadth of our
research enterprise, for the scholarly
distinction of its faculty, for the excellence of
its UG/PG/Doctoral programs, and for the
amount of funding received in support of its
research programs.
We will establish a world-renowned
science research and education
institution, where extraordinary faculty
and students seek answers to complex
questions, discover new knowledge, lead
innovation, and transform our future.
29. Educational Strategies
Problem-based Learning
Interprofessional Education
Work-based learning
Supervision, Monitoring & Coaching
Teaching & Leading Small Groups
Lectures & Large Groups
Technology-enhanced Learning
E-Learning
Simulation in Med Education/Skills Lab
Portfolios in Personal & Professional Development
Self-regulated Learning
30. Responding to the challenge
Metaleadership: optimally
engaging three facets of
organizational connectivity –
up, down, and across: who are
the many stakeholders that
must be influenced and how can
they best be leveraged to
catalyze forward progress: to
create joint ventures, strategic
alliances, etc. - vision and the
process charted are so
compelling that others follow
A high degree of emotional
intelligence is one critical
Our institution will be
dedicated to providing
its students with an
education that combines
rigorous academic study
& the excitement of
discovery with the
support & intellectual
stimulation of a diverse
campus community.
31. #1 Develop clear expectations for Uni graduates
• Employ a powerful and coherent educational philosophy.
• Use this philosophy to guide institutional investments in learning.
#2 Use a strategic planning and budget model
• Free up funds for innovation and redesign of essential programs and
support structures.
• Invest in programs that make us distinctive.
#3 Introduce a culture of evidence
• Foster a habit of continuous learning and improvement.
• Utilize an experimental approach to change.
• Guide change with evidence of impact.
32. #4 Expect high and rigorous standards
• Build support for scholarship.
• Expand institutional research and assessment.
• Define clear academic and administrative priorities and introduce rigorous performance
expectations.
#5 Promote productive collaborations and partnerships both
internal and external
• Focus on strategic societal issues (e.g. quality of preK-12 education, renewable energy,
health care, community development, diversification of the economy, arts/cultural
programs).
• Create learning opportunities for our students.
#6 Foster interdisciplinary work within the administration
as well as across academic programs
• Between Centres/Colleges
• Between academic and student affairs.
• Across fields and disciplines.
33. #7 Partner within University and beyond
• Center of Excellence.
• Educational partnerships.
• Collaborations with the University
• Long-term collaborations with regional business
#8 Seek additional sources of external support
• Portfolio of grant support.
• Expand graduate programming.
• Fund-raising.
• New educational packages: summer session, workshops, etc.
#9 Expand international programming
• To promote global competence.
• To support development of regional enterprise
34. Staying at the Top:
Creating a Culture of Operational Excellence
3. High Concentration of Talent
2. Abundant Resources
1. Exceptional
Governance
3 key components
Features that encourage strategic
vision, innovation, and flexibility
and that enable institution to
make decisions and to manage
resources
Faculty and
Students
To offer a rich learning environment
and to conduct advanced research
35. Leadership Framework
University Leadership:
Results Orientated
Customer Focused
Visionary
Creativity
Strategically Focused
Ask Great Questions
Make High-Quality Decisions
Be an Incredible Communicator
Integrity
Dedication/ Confidence/ Optimism
A strong team
Inspiration
Delivering the Service
36. Shaping the future
Key Concepts Seek
answers to
“impossible”
questions
Discover
new
knowledge
Lead the
way into
the
future
Recruiting
top-calibre
scientists &
scholars
Employ
intellectu
al
pioneers
Engage some
of the
greatest
humanitarians
What will
set us apart?
37. The challenges facing
our world are great.
The time to address &
ameliorate them is
short.
The opportunity for
action is now.
And the agent of positive
change – perhaps more
than ever before
in our history – can be
MP-MSU
Thank You
Health, like beauty, is in the eye
of the beholder; and that a
definition cannot capture its
complexity. We might need to
accept that all we can do is to
frame the concept of health
through the services that
society can afford, and modulate
our hopes and expectations with
the limited resources available &
common sense.