Moving towards Universal Health Coverage in India



Similar documents
A CALL FOR INNOVATIVE REFORM

Retaining skilled health Human Resources for Rural and Remote areas. a mapping of efforts under NRHM and ongoing studies in this area:

The Indian Health Sector

Maternal & Child Mortality and Total Fertility Rates. Sample Registration System (SRS) Office of Registrar General, India 7th July 2011

Chapter 3 LITERACY AND EDUCATION

Press Note on Poverty Estimates,

GOVERNMENT OF INDIA PRESS INFORMATION BUREAU *****

Hum a n Re s o u r c e s in He a lt h Se c t o r

Ninety three percent of the workforce in India

CHAPTER-VI ECONOMIC GROWTH, POVERTY AND SOCIAL SERVICES EXPENDITURE. In this chapter, the impact of social services expenditure on economic

How To Improve Health Care In India

Outsourcing of diagnostic services in public health facilities in Chhattisgarh. A critique by Jan Swasthya Abhiyan Chhattisgarh

ESTIMATES OF MORTALITY INDICATORS

Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana: Pioneering Public-Private Partnership in Health Insurance

Enabling access to long-term finance for healthcare in India

Union Budget 2015 Inspiring confidence, empowering change in India. Healthcare Post-budget sectoral point of view

Health Security for All

Press Note on Poverty Estimates,

China s 12th Five-Year Plan: Healthcare sector

Working Paper No: 158 ACCESS TO AND FINANCING OF HEALTHCARE THROUGH HEALTH INSURANCE INTERVENTION IN INDIA. Shailender Kumar Hooda

Group Health Insurance Schemes of State Governments

NATIONAL RURAL HEALTH MISSION- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS. 2. What is the coverage of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM)?

Web Edition: PROVISIONAL POPULATION TOTALS. Chapter 5. Census of India 2001 Series 1, India, Paper 1 of Chapter 5

Presentations by panellists were followed by a dialogue with members of the Council. These discussions are hereunder summarized.

Role of Private Sector in Medical Education and Human Resource Development for Health in India

VITAMIN A DEFICIENCY

Snapshot Report on Russia s Healthcare Infrastructure Industry

Development of Health Insurance Scheme for the Rural Population in China

HEALTHCARE UTILISATION AND EXPENDITURE PATTERNS IN INDIA

7.2. Insurance and Investments

Is RSBY India s platform to implementing universal hospital insurance?

Sub: States Fiscal Consolidation ( )

Trends in Private and Public Investments in Agricultural Marketing Infrastructure in India

STATE WISE DATA As on

GROWTH, DEVELOPMENT AND POVERTY IN INDIA AND NEPAL

National Family Health Survey-3 reported, low fullimmunization coverage rates in Andhra Pradesh, India: who is to be blamed?

This document is developed by Swasti, Health Resource Centre as a product of the People for Health Project.

How does access to social pensions and public health care affect the well-being of elderly poor in India?

India Human Development Report 2011: Towards Social Inclusion

Question 1: What does NSAP stand for and when was it launched?

KNOWLEDGE AND ATTITUDE OF MOTHERS TOWARDS JANANI SURAKSHA YOJANA IN A SELECTED RURAL AREA OF MANGALORE, D.K., KARNATAKA

Primary health care and the private sector in low and middle income countries: Asia in comparative perspective

VOLUNTARY HEALTH INSURANCE FOR RURAL INDIA* GYAN SINGH** ABSTRACT

ISID. ISID-PHFI Collaborative Research Programme. CHANGING PATTERN OF PUBLIC EXPENDITURE ON HEALTH IN INDIA Issues and Challenges

Financing Skill Development: Status of Model Vocational Training Loan Scheme. Priyambda Tripathi 1. Abstract

National Iodine Deficiency Disorders Control Programme

Summary. Developing with Jobs

HUMAN RESOURCES FOR PUBLIC HEALTH IN INDIA ISSUES AND CHALLENGES

Strengthening Nursing and Midwifery Pre-Service Education in India: A national Initiative

State Data Centre. Round Table Conference 30 th July 2009

SOCIAL BACKGROUND OF OFFICERS IN THE INDIAN ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICE SANTOSH GOYAL

Health Care Services in India: Problems and Prospects

Jan Swasthya Abhiyan India Peoples Rural Health Watch

Since achieving independence from Great Britain in 1963, Kenya has worked to improve its healthcare system.

This document is developed by Swasti, Health Resource Centre as a product of the People for Health Project.

Summary. Accessibility and utilisation of health services in Ghana 245

Social Security in India Lessons from Transfer Mechanisms

ESTIMATION OF LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH

Chapter: 2 Health care Industry in India

Institutional Reforms to Reduce the Cost of Medical Care. Chairman, the Cato Institute

HEALTHCARE AND HEALTHCARE EQUIPMENTS

Health Insurance: Innovation and Challenges Ahead

PRICE DISSEMINATION PROJECT

cambodia Maternal, Newborn AND Child Health and Nutrition

Colombia REACHING THE POOR WITH HEALTH SERVICES. Using Proxy-Means Testing to Expand Health Insurance for the Poor. Differences between Rich and Poor

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

MYANMAR HEALTH CARE SYSTEM

Introduction. relevant that maternal and infant mortality continue to remain unacceptably high in several parts of the country.

REDUCING HEALTH INEQUALITIES IN TURKEY WITHIN THE SCOPE OF HEALTH TRANSFORMATION PRORAMME

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

a) Whether there is a need to revisit the existing approach for debt: equity ratio or to continue with the existing composition?

Poverty & health: Criticality of public financing

Women s Energy Justice Network: CDM Financing and Microlending for Appropriate Technology REEEP Output # N3123

Preventable mortality and morbidity of children under 5 years of age as a human rights concern

GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT. Uganda Case Study: Increasing Access to Maternal and Child Health Services. Transforming relationships to empower communities

34-1/2013/DAF Dr. Ambedkar Foundation Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment

ANNUAL REPORT to the PEOPLE on Health

DRAFT National Mission on Small Hydro

Indian software industry

Internal Migration and Regional Disparities in India

Health Spending and Inequality in the Emerging Economies:

Moving Toward Universal Health Coverage R A S H T R I Y A S W A S T H Y A B H I M A Y O J A N A (R S B Y) 1 India

Financing Healthcare for all in India: Towards a Common Goal

What can China learn from Hungarian healthcare reform?

VIRTUAL CONSULTATION PLATFORM

Lessons learned from a community-based medisave experiment among rural women in the Indian state of Karnataka

Orphans and Vulnerable Children in India A Broad Overview. Kavitha P. Das, B.D.S., M.P.H.

BEHAVIOR CHANGE COMMUNICATION AS AN INTERVENTION TO IMPROVE FAMILY HEALTH OUTCOMES

Finland Population: Fertility rate: GDP per capita: Children under 6 years: Female labour force participation:

India: Defining and Explaining Inclusive Growth and Poverty Reduction

Lecture Day 4 Session I POVERTY AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

Integrated Healthcare Technology Package: Introduction. Peter Heimann World Health Organization, Genève

Policy Implementation and Impact Review: A Case of MGNREGA in India

Delivering Local Health Care

Nigeria s Health Statistics and Trends

* mismatch between personnel and infrastructure;

IT for Integrated Hospital Management

OECD Reviews of Health Systems Mexico

Why Accept Medicaid Dollars: The Facts

Free healthcare services for pregnant and lactating women and young children in Sierra Leone

Transcription:

1 of 5 2/11/2013 5:00 PM February 11, 2013 SectionsSpecialsServices Home Videos Archives Contributors' Checklist Contact Us Healthcare Sourcing Search... Moving towards Universal Health Coverage in India Tweet 0 Share 1 2 Category: 13th Anniversary Special Published on Thursday, 10 January 2013 20:16 Dr Nata Menabde, WHO Representative to India and Dr Arunachalam Gunasekar, Technical Officer, WHO India Country Office for India elucidate on the steps needed to taken in the coming year for achieving Universal Health Coverage in India and stress that access for all would come with financial protection Encouraged by the country s unprecedented economic progress, the Prime Dr Nata Menabde Minister-led call for achieving universal health coverage in India is gathering further momentum. Described by the WHO Director General, Margaret Chan as the single most powerful concept that public health has to offer, universal health coverage seeks to ensure that all people have access to the needed comprehensive health services of sufficient quality and effectiveness, at the same time ensuring that people do not suffer financial hardship while accessing health services. Universal health coverage is expected to allow everyone - the rich and poor, men and women, ethnic or religious majorities and minorities - to enjoy full and equal access to the services concerned. International experience shows that universal health coverage is not only a matter of rich countries. Even lower-middle income countries, for example Ghana and Indonesia, have made substantial progress, provided that the idea receives sufficient political support. Though India's total health expenditure at 4.2 per cent of GDP is not too small a figure in comparison to many countries, the country s public expenditure on health (1.04 per cent of GDP in 2011-12) is too small to make sufficient progress towards universal health coverage. The government expenditure on drugs, for example, in 2010-11, was only Rs. 5,034 crores (4.9 per cent of total government expenditure on health), a much lower figure than most countries. The persistent low levels of public health expenditure has possibly been also one main reason for service quality and infrastructure deficiencies in public sector health facilities resulting in steady increase of population preference for private sector providers since 1995-96 (National Sample Surveys). In fact, the main reasons given by the population for private sector preference are non-availability of services in public facilities, lack of satisfaction with provided services, distance and long waiting time. The high costs of health care has also led to large numbers of ailments going untreated, and increasing numbers being pushed into poverty due to out-of-pocket expenditure (from 26 million in 1993-94 to 39 million in 2004-05). Out-of-pocket health expenditure in India is 60.2 per cent of total health expenditure. This is far

2 of 5 2/11/2013 5:00 PM above out-of-pocket expenditures in, for example, other BRICS nations - China (37.5 per cent), Brazil (32.3 per cent), Russia (17.2 per cent) and South Africa (16.6 per cent). Significantly, 74 per cent of out-of-pocket expenditure in India is on drugs. More is needed, please! A major step the Government of India took in this direction was the launch in 2005 of the Dr Arunachalam Gunasekar National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), with the main focus on improving primary health care. The NRHM has led to an increase in public spending and brought some flexibility into the financing mechanism. On the minus side, it has failed to adequately offset the fiscal limitations of the poorer states, leaving some states having poor health indicators with large unmet expenditure needs. Shortfalls of health facilities remain at 20 per cent for Sub-Centres, 24 per cent for PHCs and 37 per cent for CHCs, with the worst situation in Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh. Despite some improvements in human resources for health in the public sector, serious shortages in staffing remain - 52 per cent for ANMs and nurses, 76 per cent for doctors, 88 per cent for specialists and 58 per cent for pharmacists. Also maternal mortality ratio at national level remains unchanged (5.5 per cent in 2001-03 to 2004-06 and 5.8 per cent during 2004-06 to 2007-09) despite the efforts, with suboptimal performance in the very Empowered Action Group (EAG) states focussed for attention by NRHM. The likely explanations are gaps in ante-natal care, skilled birth attendance and emergency obstetrical care. Part of the difficulty comes from the diversity of the country. The decline in infant mortality rates, for example, has accelerated in recent years but is still about four to five fold higher in the large states of Madhya Pradesh (59), Uttar Pradesh and Orissa (57), Assam (55), Rajasthan (52) when compared to more successfully performing states such as Goa and Manipur (11) and Kerala (12). The Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) scheme has increased institutional deliveries in rural (39.7 to 68 per cent) and urban areas (79 per cent to 85 per cent) over the 2005 09 period, but low levels of full ante-natal care (22.8 in rural, and 26.1 in urban in 2009) and quality of care continue to be areas of concern. Also, a recent study in Jharkhand on 500 new mothers showed that bad roads, poor connectivity and unavailability of transport at night continue to force more than one-third of pregnant women to deliver at home. Full immunisation in children has only improved coverage from 54.5 per cent in 2005 to 61 per cent in 2009 during the Eleventh Plan. A few years after the NRHM, the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojna (RSBY) scheme run by the Ministry of Labour & Employment aims to provide financial risk protection for in-patient care (mainly) to the population living below poverty line. It uses an insurance mechanism and currently covers 80 million beneficiaries (in contrast, the NRHM is tax-based). Along with the comprehensive union-funded insurance schemes (Employee State Insurance Scheme, with 60 million beneficiaries and the Central Government Health Scheme covering three million), some 143 million people are now covered in India. In recent years health insurance schemes funded by some states have emerged, already covering about 110 million people mainly for tertiary care (Andhra Pradesh 70 million; Karnataka? 5 million and Tamil Nadu 35 million). All the above routes need to be developed by pooling their financial resources, also reaping the benefit from extra efforts and even the strengths of individual schemes. The Twelfth Plan strategy towards universal health coverage envisages a rise in public funding by the Centre and States to 1.87 per cent of GDP by the end of the Plan. At the time of writing this article, the Minister for Health & Family Welfare Shri Ghulam Nabi Azad stated in a reply to a question in the Parliament on 11 December 2012 that the tentative allocation for the 12th Five Year Plan for Ministry of Health and Family Welfare is Rs 300,018 crores as compared to the actual allocation of Rs. 99,491 crores during 11th Plan period. The 202 per cent increase in health budget in the 12th Plan over the 11th Plan allocation compares well with the 123 per cent and 109 per cent increase under the social services budget and total budget respectively. The Twelfth Five-Year Plan (2012-17) intends to address India s key financial and service provision challenges and realise the goal of universal health coverage in two parallel steps: Clinical services at different levels, defined in a government financed, public health system- provided Essential Health Package, supplemented whenever required to fill in critical gaps by contracted-in private providers; and Provision of high impact, preventive and public health interventions which the government would ensure universally. The plan for widening the umbrella of NRHM into a National Health Mission for providing primary health care to the urban poor, estimated to be 9.3 million in size, is a further step in the right direction. International experience shows that India's march towards UHC would not only require health financing and financial protection reforms but also sustained efforts to

3 of 5 2/11/2013 5:00 PM promote, organise and speed up development of systems for better access to quality medicines, vaccines and new and appropriate technologies; strengthening of human resources; participation of communities and private health sector; and institutional and management reforms. There are other issues on regulation in India which include governance, human resources, corruption, public private partnerships, contracting-in services etc. that also deserve attention. The problem lies in not having a single, unified system to establish standards (for structures, processes about quality, rationality and costs of care, treatment protocols and ethical behaviour) applicable to both the public and the private sector. Such a unified system would be essential for ensuring accountability of these institutions and organisations. It is also vital that States are taken on board not only through their financial strength but also their endorsement/ratification of necessary service provision regulation (e.g. Clinical Establishments Act), without which service quality just cannot become a reality. Conclusion: cautious optimism Sustained political action is one of the foremost requirements for giving momentum for India s march towards universal health coverage, reflecting the new opportunities for providing the essential health services that the economic growth is creating and meet the fast growing expectations of Indian citizens. WHO s 2012-2017 Country Cooperation Strategy with the Government of India, launched jointly by WHO-India Country Office and the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare after an intense policy dialogue and consultative process, supports the progress of the country towards universal coverage and hails with moderate optimism the prospects in this regard. Most Read Past Issues July 2012 August 2012 October, 2012 September, 2012 Part - 2 Related Articles PRE-BUDGET RECOMMENDATIONS 2013-2014 - Ameera Shah, MD & CEO Metropolis Healthcare 'At Orthofit, all evaluation is free' 'Telemedicine will essentially bridge the urban-rural medical divide' 'Tomosynthesis is the new gold standard in breast imaging 'We are currently witnessing more growth in Tier II markets'

Care Hospitals on an expansion mode more» Friday, 08 February 2013 17:50 PRE-BUDGET RECOMMENDATIONS 2013-2014 - Rajat Goel, CEO and Co-founder, Eye Q Super Speciality Eye Hospitals Friday, 08 February 2013 15:05 An Xpert to detect tuberculosis Thursday, 07 February 2013 18:33 NABH Safe-I certification programme goes national Thursday, 07 February 2013 17:14 PRE-BUDGET RECOMMENDATIONS 2013-2014 - Dr Krishna Shama Rao, Medical Director- Mayaa Clinic and Foundation Thursday, 07 February 2013 17:05 MOHFW's National Summit on Call to Action for Child Survival and Development" in Feb 2013 Thursday, 07 February 2013 16:56 PRE-BUDGET RECOMMENDATIONS 2013-2014 - Dr Sanjeev K Chaudhry, MD, SRL Diagnostics Wednesday, 06 February 2013 13:07 4 of 5 2/11/2013 5:00 PM

5 of 5 2/11/2013 5:00 PM Group Sites: Indian Express Financial Express Express India Screen India Loksatta Express Towers Feedback Site Map Contact Us Subscribe RSS Copyright 2012: The Indian Express Limited. All rights reserved throughout the world.