Community Clinic, a brainchild programme of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, is now recognised worldwide as a unique model of healthcare for marginal people. The international community, including the World Health Organization (WHO), has demanded international recognition of this model of health care in Bangladesh.
Gone are the days when rural people of Bangladesh had to go through immense sufferings from various diseases. There was no healthcare centre for treating the grassroots of the country but at present one will find community clinics almost in every upazila of Bangladesh.
Community clinics of the country have become a reference point as to how a country can successfully raise the primary healthcare following the Bangladesh model. There are more than 14,000 community clinics at present in the country and the number is gradually increasing. Now what is needed is to ensure comprehensive healthcare services to the rural people, and in order to do that the government should look forward to equipping the clinics with adequate facilities and skilled manpower. The successful operation of community clinics, especially in rural areas, depends on people with required skills. Doctors must be trained and motivated to work in rural areas and the government should offer adequate incentives to them.
For further development of
community clinics in the country,
involvement of both public and
private organisations is crucial
Since inception, community clinics have been playing an epoch-making role in improving the overall antenatal and postnatal care, family planning and nutritional services, providing treatment for diarrhea, pneumonia and other childhood infections and counseling on the consequences of early marriage in Bangladesh. With the integration of ‘Community Clinic Health Assistance Trust Act’, millions of people are getting services from the community clinics whereas just a decade ago healthcare facilities in the rural areas were very poor.
The incumbent government deserves kudos for its relentless effort for prioritising the need for incorporating community clinics. As a consequence, community clinics are largely filling the gap in public healthcare system.
For further development of community clinics in the country, involvement of both public and private organisations is crucial. In this regard, corporate houses can play an effective role by spending a portion of their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) fund to develop the country’s healthcare sector. Also, there is a need to motivate the rural people for availing health services at the community clinic.