Design and Long-Term Sustainability of Mini Health Centers for Primary Healthcare in Chennai, India

印度钦奈市基层医疗保健迷你健康中心的设计与长期可持续性

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Abstract

Sustaining high-quality primary health care (PHC) over decades remains a major challenge in low- and middle-income countries. While many pilot programs yield short-term gains, few models demonstrate uninterrupted operation, adaptation, and impact beyond 5-10 years. The Mini Health Center (MHC) model, launched by Voluntary Health Services (VHS) Hospital in Chennai in 1969, integrates preventive, promotive, rehabilitative, and curative care through a "three-C" framework, i.e., Continuous care, Continuum of care, and Cooperative community partnership. This study examines the long-term evolution and sustainability of the VHS MHC model, offering lessons for enduring community-based PHC. We conducted a retrospective program evaluation combining an archival review of foundational Community Health and Education Development Combine (COHEDEC) reports with an analysis of annual VHS Community Health Department data (FY 2019-2024). A standardized abstraction template captured quantitative indicators, such as population coverage, outpatient visits, domain-specific beneficiary counts, group sessions, and hospital referrals, which were extracted independently by two reviewers. Archival chapters were coded using directed content analysis to identify design features, governance mechanisms, and staffing processes. We applied a convergent mixed-methods design to triangulate service trends with documented program adaptations and described site-level contextual factors. From single-room MHCs serving ~20,000 people, outpatient consultations rose from 6,441 (2019-20) to 23,273 (2023-24), while preventive/promotive contacts increased to 20,154 and group sessions reached 6,161. Universal immunization and institutional delivery rates reached 100%. Community screening identified 472 new diabetes and 569 new hypertension cases (FY 2019-20), and TB referrals increased from 15 to 42 cases (2019-23). Governance records highlight sustained community contributions (10-15% of operating costs), routine health-committee oversight, and in-village Multi-Purpose Health Worker (MPHW) residency ensuring 24×7 accessibility. Adaptations, including non-communicable disease (NCD) screening, mobile health messaging, and tech-enabled outreach, corresponded with expanded service outputs. The VHS MHC model demonstrates that embedding trained community health workers, robust referral linkages, and genuine community partnerships can sustain comprehensive PHC across changing epidemiological and demographic landscapes. Key design and governance elements from this 50-year legacy offer a replicable blueprint for building resilient, people-centered primary care systems.

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