Allied Healthcare Reforms in India: India House Report Highlights Implementation Roadblocks and Workforce Potential

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In a significant push toward strengthening allied healthcare in India, an industry report submitted by India House to the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW) and the National Commission for Allied & Healthcare Professions (NCAHP) has highlighted the urgent need to bridge policy and practice. Titled “Strengthening Allied & Healthcare Capacity,” the report focuses on enabling the effective implementation of recent allied healthcare reforms—an area critical for improving India’s healthcare delivery system and workforce readiness.

Launched with over 60 stakeholders from government, academia, healthcare, and civil society, the report shows a shared push for better allied healthcare training and rules. Attendees included Sampath Kumar, Principal Secretary, Government of meghalaya; Dr Prasad V. G. Commission Member, NCAHP; Dr. Amit Patel, Committee Member, NCAHP; and kamal Pant, Chairperson, Uttar Pradesh State Allied & Healthcare Council.

The NCAHP Act, 2021 gave India's patchwork allied healthcare system structure long overdue. AHPs, those who run diagnostics, therapy, rehab, and hospital daily work - make up almost 60% of the workforce. Without them, the system doesn't run smoothly or deliver good results.

Policy is clear. The report finds real roadblocks in how things get done. Registration paths are vague. University training doesn't match what regulators expect. Clinics lack proper training space. These aren't deep flaws in design, they're carrying out issues needing smart fixes that actually work on the ground.

Adapting to change begins with simpler pathways for students. Through India House, admission and transitions are made clearer. Regulators and schools must work together more closely. Institutional alignment improves when new rules come out. The goal isn't just smart design - it's practical results on the ground.

Kumar Subham, Co-Founder and CEO of india House, said the NCAHP structure gives India structure. But real progress comes from how it's carried out. Not in paper form, but in practice.

The healthcare sector can do more than treat patients. It can create jobs. Now, and it can grow regional economies. India could become a global center for healthcare talent.

India's shift from policy to action hinges on institutions changing how they operate. Turning plans into real results takes active adaptation and commitment.

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