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WHO clarifies it never endorsed a 1:1,000 doctor ratio, calling it a misleading myth.
The World Health Organization has clarified it never officially recommended a one-doctor-per-1,000 people standard, calling the figure a widely circulated but inaccurate benchmark.
Dr. Giorgio Cometto, WHO’s health workforce head, labeled it a “factoid” and warned against using it for national planning.
While WHO does cite a threshold of 4.45 doctors, nurses, and midwives per 1,000 for essential health coverage, it stresses that workforce needs vary by country based on disease burden, demographics, and health system structure.
The myth originated in India’s 2011 Vision 2015 report and was wrongly attributed to WHO, despite no official endorsement.
Experts caution that relying on a uniform ratio overlooks disparities in rural-urban distribution and infrastructure, potentially leading to inefficient expansions of medical education and workforce shortages in underserved areas.
La OMS aclara que nunca apoyó una proporción de médicos de 1: 1,000, llamándola un mito engañoso.