Dear Shanta,

I feel honored to find space in your blog.  There is no disagreement between us.  Sorry, my article was not clear enough and led to confusion.  When I recommended increasing the number of MBBS, I had in mind that they will work as private practitioners and not add to the rolls of absentee providers in the public sector.  Foremost in my mind was Karnataka which has added medical colleges faster than any other state, expanding the supply of doctors in the private sector.  The result has been the availability of medical services at prices well below most other states.

Some five years ago, I fell down in Bangalore and was taken to a private hospital by my host institution ISEC.  I was first examined by a physician, given an anti-tetanus shot, had x-rays taken of knee and arm, and then seen by an orthopedist.   The orthopedist explained using the x-ray, just as in the U.S., that I had a hairline fracture in the arm.  They then gave me an arm sling and a bunch of pain killers.  All that cost just Rs. 600 ($15 at the current exchange rate)! If this had happened in Jaipur, my hometown, the cost would have been at least four times.  Unsurprisingly, Rajasthan has had no more than two medical colleges added in the last twenty years! 

Arvind