The Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) is grappling with a severe shortage of medical staff, with 74% of approved positions for Class I specialist doctors lying vacant. The healthcare system, which serves a growing urban population, has been critically impacted by this shortfall, affecting essential services like gynaecology, paediatrics, neurology, cardiology, and more. According to PMC data, of the 1,164 sanctioned positions, 434 remain unfilled, leaving the public healthcare system overstretched.
The PMC’s health department, already under strain, is taking steps to address this issue. A review meeting was held with the additional municipal commissioner to assess the situation and explore solutions. The health department is pushing for recruitment efforts to fill the vacant posts, focusing on increasing the number of approved positions to better reflect the city’s growing population. This is a crucial step, as the current vacancies are based on the population size recorded a decade ago, leaving the city’s healthcare facilities under-equipped to meet today’s demands.
Health activists have raised concerns about the ongoing shortage, pointing out that the city’s vulnerable population suffers the most. Patients who cannot afford private healthcare are forced to rely on an increasingly under-resourced public system. They argue that competitive salaries, improved working conditions, and frequent recruitment drives could help attract specialised medical staff to fill these gaps. Without addressing these systemic issues, the PMC’s healthcare services risk further deterioration, pushing more patients towards private healthcare, which remains unaffordable for many.
From a sustainability perspective, the shortage of medical staff in Pune presents long-term challenges for the health infrastructure. Sustainable development requires healthcare systems that can support the well-being of all citizens, particularly as urban populations grow. Ensuring adequate medical staffing is crucial not only for immediate healthcare needs but also for the city’s long-term resilience in providing equitable access to medical services. The PMC must also focus on healthcare capacity-building that aligns with the city’s increasing population, reinforcing a system that is inclusive, efficient, and future-ready.