Abstract
Pediatric medicine developed as an independent medical discipline primarily responding to elevated infant mortality rates, prevalent infectious diseases, and childhood malnutrition. Effective immunization initiatives and enhanced nutritional standards have substantially decreased these conventional disease burdens, especially across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), such as India. This epidemiological shift has generated fundamental challenges for pediatric medicine as a specialized field, evidenced by waning medical student engagement, personnel shortages, and consistently modest remuneration relative to other medical specialties. This review investigates the evolving pediatric practice environment in India relative to other LMICs and developed nations (the United States (US), the United Kingdom (UK), Europe, and Australia), examines workforce dynamics and compensation patterns through evidence-based analysis, and suggests strategic pathways for the discipline's advancement to maintain relevance and viability. The analysis utilizes a narrative review methodology incorporating a comprehensive evaluation of peer-reviewed literature, governmental publications, and workforce analyses published between 2015 and 2025. India's infant mortality rate decreased from 88 in 1990 to 27 per 1,000 live births in 2021, representing a 69% reduction, while the Under-5 Mortality Rate declined from 126 to 32 per 1,000 live births - a 75% decrease. These achievements have fundamentally transformed pediatric practice patterns but created workforce challenges, including declining medical student interest, with only 8.3% expressing pediatric preferences compared to 24.7% for internal medicine. Compensation analysis reveals pediatricians earn 35-40% less than other specialists in comparable practice settings. International comparisons demonstrate similar patterns across high-income countries, with American pediatricians ranking among the lowest-paid specialists and the UK reporting 25% consultant vacancy rates. Strategic recommendations include educational reform emphasizing non-communicable diseases and mental health, practice model innovation incorporating integrated care approaches, policy advocacy for appropriate reimbursement structures, and career diversification opportunities. Success requires coordinated efforts across medical education, practice innovation, policy development, and professional advocacy to demonstrate pediatric medicine's continued value in addressing contemporary child health challenges while maintaining specialty sustainability.