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Kartar Singh Committee Recommendations

Kartar Singh Committee, formally known as “Committee on Multipurpose Workers under Health and Family Planning,” was constituted by Government of India in October 1972. Chaired by Shri Kartar Singh, then Additional Secretary in Ministry of Health and Family Planning, committee submitted its report in September 1973.

It is considered a landmark in history of Indian public health because it laid foundation for Multipurpose Worker (MPW) Scheme, shifting country away from “vertical” (disease-specific) programs toward an integrated primary healthcare approach.

Context 

Before 1973, India’s health services were fragmented. Different health workers were responsible for separate programs—one for Malaria, one for Smallpox, and another for Family Planning. This led to:

Major Recommendations

Committee’s primary objective was to integrate health, family planning, and nutrition services at grassroots level.

1. Multipurpose Workers (MPW)

Committee recommended that instead of having specialized (uni-purpose) workers, there should be Multipurpose Workers.

2. Norms for Health Infrastructure

To ensure better reach and supervision, committee redefined population norms:

3. Supervison

Committee introduced a new tier of supervision to ensure quality of field work:

4. Integration 

Committee emphasized that fixed target mobile units (like those for sterilization) should be integrated into PHC system rather than running as independent entities. They also suggested that training programs for these workers should be reform to cover multiple health disciplines simultaneously.

Impact 

Kartar Singh Committee’s report led to official launch of Multipurpose Health Workers Scheme during Fifth Five-Year Plan (1974–1979).

Feature Before Kartar Singh Committee After Kartar Singh Committee
Worker Type Uni-purpose (Malaria, Smallpox, etc.) Multipurpose (Integrated Care)
PHC Norms Varying, often over 100,000 people 1 PHC per 50,000 people
Sub-centre Staff Mostly female (ANM) One Male + One Female worker
Focus Vertical disease eradication Integrated health & family planning

Legacy

Kartar Singh Committee is reason why modern Indian rural health system uses MPW designation. By promoting “One Worker, Multiple Tasks” philosophy, it made healthcare delivery system more accountable and accessible to rural poor. It paved way for Shrivastav Committee (1975), which further refined community-based health services.

Note: While committee recommended a PHC for every 50,000 people, later committees (like Shrivastav Committee) further reduced this to 30,000 in plains and 20,000 in hilly/tribal areas to improve accessibility.

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