## Correct Answer: D. Should have a 100-bed facility in metro cities Urban Community Health Centers (UCHCs) are secondary-level health facilities established under India's tiered healthcare system to bridge the gap between primary health centers and tertiary hospitals in urban settings. The **100-bed capacity in metro cities** is the defining criterion for establishing a UCHC, as per the National Health Mission (NHM) guidelines and the Mudaliar Committee recommendations adapted for urban India. This bed strength ensures the facility can handle a significant patient load, provide inpatient care for common conditions, conduct minor surgical procedures, and serve as a referral center for multiple primary health centers in the urban area. Metro cities with high population density and concentrated disease burden require this higher capacity to manage the volume of patients seeking secondary care. The 100-bed standard is specifically mandated for metropolitan areas where population concentration and healthcare demand justify the infrastructure investment. This distinguishes UCHCs from smaller urban primary health centers (typically 4-6 beds) and aligns with the Indian Public Health Standards (IPHS) framework for urban health facility planning. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. No sub-district and district hospitals present in the area** — This is incorrect because UCHCs are established **regardless of the presence of district hospitals**. They serve a distinct role in the urban healthcare hierarchy and are meant to provide secondary care at the community level, not as a substitute for district hospitals. The absence of district hospitals is neither a prerequisite nor a criterion for UCHC establishment. UCHCs function as intermediate facilities even in areas with district hospitals. **B. Referral center for 2-3 primary health centers** — This is incorrect because UCHCs typically serve as referral centers for **multiple (5-10+) primary health centers**, not just 2-3. The criterion focuses on the **bed capacity and population served** rather than the number of PHCs. A UCHC with 100 beds is designed to handle referrals from a much larger network of primary facilities in urban areas, making this option too restrictive and not the defining criterion. **C. Caters to a population of 1-1.5 lakh** — This is incorrect because the **population criterion for UCHCs is typically 3-5 lakh** (or higher in metro cities), not 1-1.5 lakh. A population of 1-1.5 lakh would be better served by urban primary health centers with smaller bed capacity. The 100-bed UCHC is designed for larger urban populations, particularly in metropolitan areas where the catchment population is significantly higher, making this option underestimate the facility's intended scale. ## High-Yield Facts - **Urban Community Health Center (UCHC)** = 100-bed secondary care facility in metro cities per IPHS and NHM guidelines - **Population served by UCHC** = 3-5 lakh (or higher in metros), not 1-1.5 lakh which is for urban PHCs - **UCHC referral network** = serves 5-10+ primary health centers, functioning as secondary referral center in urban hierarchy - **UCHC staffing** = includes specialists (medicine, surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics), nursing staff, and diagnostic facilities unlike primary centers - **UCHC functions** = inpatient care, minor surgery, maternal/child health services, disease surveillance, and community health programs ## Mnemonics **UCHC = 100 Beds in Metro** **U**rban **C**ommunity **H**ealth **C**enter = **100 beds** in **metro cities**. Remember: 100 is the magic number for secondary care in urban metros. Use this when distinguishing UCHC from smaller urban PHCs (4-6 beds) or rural CHCs (30 beds). **Urban Facility Hierarchy: 4-6 → 30 → 100** Urban PHC (4-6 beds) → Urban CHC/UCHC (30 beds in smaller cities) → **UCHC (100 beds in metros)**. The bed capacity increases with urban tier and population density. Helps differentiate facility types by bed strength. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair "referral center for 2-3 PHCs" with UCHCs to trap students who confuse the smaller urban PHC network model with the larger UCHC network. The trap is that students may recall "referral center" as a UCHC function but underestimate the scale—UCHCs serve many more PHCs and larger populations than this option suggests. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian metro cities like Delhi, Mumbai, and Bangalore, UCHCs with 100 beds serve as the backbone of secondary care, handling overflow from overburdened district hospitals and providing accessible inpatient care for urban poor populations. This model has reduced unnecessary tertiary hospital admissions and improved disease surveillance in urban slums. _Reference: Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Ch. Health Care of The Community in India / Urban Health Services); Indian Public Health Standards (IPHS) 2012 – Urban Health Facilities_
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