Community Health Care Centre
Community Health Care Centre
Community Health Care Centre
Health Care
Centre
Submitted by: Jhanvi Mishra,Kanika
Rajput,Jatin Grover
Group practise
This is the combination of two or more practising
doctors with shared staff and premises.
WHAT IS CHCs:-add it in
form of chart kanika
The Community Health Centre (CHC), the third tier
of the network of rural health care institutions, was
required to act primarily as a referral centre (for the
neighbouring PHCs, usually 4 in number) for the
patients requiring specialised health care services.
Community Health Centres (CHCs-30 bedded
hospital) and higher order public
hospitals at sub-district and district hospitals. It has
4-6 indoor beds for patients.
The standards prescribed in this document are for a
PHC covering 20,000 to
30,000 populations with 6 beds.
Mutli purpose
Objectives: The objective of having a referral centre for the primary health care
institutions was two-fold;
to make modern health care services accessible to the rural people
and
to ease the overcrowding in the district hospitals.
The CHCs were accordingly designed to be equipped with: four
specialists
medicine,
surgery,
paediatrics and
gynaecology; 30 beds for indoor patients; operation theatre, labour
room, X-ray
machine, pathological laboratory, standby generator , etc., along with
the complementary medical and
para medical staff.
Delivery space:
the basis of
40 patients per doctor per day, the expected
number of beneficiaries for maternal and child
health care and family planning and about 60%
utilization of the available indoor/observation
beds (6 beds).
It would be a dynamic process in the sense that if the utilization goes up, the
standards would be further upgraded. As regards, manpower, one more
Medical Officer (may be from AYUSH or a lady doctor) and
two more staff nurses are added to the existing total staff strength of 15 in the
PHC to make it 24x7 services delivery centre. to all the national health
programmes.
THERE SHOULD BE
INDIVIDUAL ROOMS
AVAILABLE FOR INDIVIDUAL
PURPOSES . SUCH AS THE
FOLLOWS IN FITHER SLIDES
Basic requirements:
WHAT ARE
SRTANDARDS ??
Standards are a means of describing the level of
quality that health care organizations are expected
to meet or aspire to.
In order to provide optimal level of
quality health care, a set of standards are being
recommended for Primary Health
Centre to be called Indian Public Health Standards
(IPHS) for PHCs.
Physical Infrastructure
The CHC should have 30 indoor beds
with one Operation
theatre, labour room,
X-ray,
ECG and
LABORATORY facilites
Outpatient
Department
Planned keeping in mind the maximum peak hour
load and shall have scope for future expansion.
EnquiryRegistrationWaitingSubW
ating
ClinicDressing room/Injection
RoomBilling
Dignostics (lab/X-ray)pharmacyExit
The cubiscle
Family Welfare
counselling room should be provided
Emergency
Room/Casualty:
It is recommended to have a separate
earmarked emergency area to be located near
the entrance of hospital preferalbly having 4
rooms
one for doctor,
one for minor OT,
one for plaster/dressing)
and one for patient observation (At least 4 beds).
Treatment Room:
oMinor OT
Injection Room and
Dressing Room
Observation Room.
measurements:
Patient Area:
. Ancillary rooms:
Nurses rest room.
There should be an area separating OPD
and Indoor facility.
Public utilities: Separate for males and female; for patient as well as for
paramedical & Medical staff.Disabled friendly, WC with wash basins as specified
under Guidelines for disabled friendly environment should be provided. Physical
Administrative zone:
HIERACRHY :
Health care delivery in India has been envisaged at three
levels namely
primary,
secondary and
tertiary.
The secondary level of health care essentially includes
Community Health Centres (CHCs), constituting the First
Referral Units (FRUs) and the Sub-district and District
Hospitals.
The CHCs were designed to provide referral health care for
cases from the Primary Health Centres level and for cases in
need of specialist care approaching the centre directly.
4 PHCs are included under each CHC thus catering to
approximately 80,000 populations in tribal/hilly/desert areas
and 1,20,000 population for plain areas.