Dr Mir Tariq Altaf
Health policies often speak about children with the right intent. Translating that intent into effective care, however, remains a challenge—particularly in pediatric orthopaedics. Children are not small adults. Their bones grow, remodel, and deform if mishandled. What is correctable in infancy can become irreversible in adolescence. In such conditions, delay is not neutral—it is harmful. Congenital and developmental orthopaedic conditions require early, specialised intervention. Yet within many healthcare financing models, these conditions fall into grey zones—neither emergencies nor clearly prioritised. This creates practical difficulties for families seeking timely care, despite existing welfare mechanisms.
Early treatment of conditions such as clubfoot or hip dislocation is simple, cost-effective, and often avoids surgery altogether. When treatment is delayed, care becomes more complex, more expensive, and more burdensome for both families and the health system. From a policy standpoint, early pediatric orthopaedic care represents preventive investment rather than expenditure. Infrastructure alone, however, is not sufficient. In Kashmir, a 500-bedded tertiary hospital has been functioning for several years. While facilities have expanded, the absence of a trained pediatric orthopaedic specialist highlights a broader issue—specialised manpower has not kept pace with infrastructure development.
“Integrating pediatric orthopaedics into essential public health services—through strategic staffing, clear referral systems, and early treatment—is a vital policy move that prevents lifelong disability for thousands of children.”
For children with correctable deformities, access to expertise matters as much as access to buildings. National child health initiatives such as Ayushman Bharat and Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK) reflect commendable intent. However, translating early identification into definitive orthopaedic care requires stronger linkage with trained specialists and treatment pathways. Detection without timely intervention risks becoming an incomplete solution. The long-term consequences of delayed care are well known. Families with resources seek care elsewhere. Those without often wait. Over time, preventable deformities turn into lifelong disabilities—impacting education, employment, and independence. This also affects the medical ecosystem.
When pediatric orthopaedics is not clearly recognised as an essential subspecialty, training opportunities, sanctioned posts, and career pathways remain limited. Children are then managed by well-meaning non-specialists, and avoidable deformities become accepted outcomes. This is not a question of blame, but of prioritisation. Children do not articulate policy gaps. They live with them. A healthcare system that aspires to reduce disability must focus not only on treatment, but on timely, specialised, and growth-preserving care. Recognising pediatric orthopaedics as an essential service—supported by manpower planning, referral pathways, and early intervention—would protect thousands of children from preventable disability. That is not just good medicine. It is sound public policy.
(The author a national TV debater is a freelancer. The views, opinions and conclusions expressed in this article are those of the author and aren’t necessarily in accord with the views of “Kashmir Horizon”)




