Business Standard

Modicare still in making two days before launch

- VEENA MANI

The government has advanced the launch of Ayushman Bharat, renamed Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Abhiyan (PMJAY), by two days as Prime Minister Narendra Modi is learnt to have a packed day on September 25 — the scheduled roll-out date. With just two days to go for the Sunday launch, there seem to be many loose ends that need to be tied up. The PM will travel to Jharkhand to inaugurate what is being seen as the biggest health care scheme.

Sources indicated that the standard operating procedures required for treatment under the scheme were yet to be put in place. In fact, the NITI Aayog will now help the Union health ministry set up the procedures. This could take a few more months. A senior official said, “Till then, doctors will treat patients in the manner they deem fit. Some southern states already have treatment protocols and we are trying to work around those to bring national-level protocols for the scheme.”

■ Sources indicate that standard operating procedures required for treatment are yet to be put in place

■ The scheme requires the patient’s Aadhaar number for verificati­on and it could be a problem in the northeast where its penetratio­n is minimal

■ Telangana, Delhi and Odisha are still not on board. The Centre hopes Telangana joins as early as next week

■ The tally of hospitals empanelled for the scheme stands at around 8,000, lower than the target

■ Hospital staff will have to be trained to use the Ayushman portal

There’s another bottleneck. In the north-eastern parts of the country, for instance, Aadhaar penetratio­n is minimal. So, the Ayushman Bharat team has been in touch with UIDAI authoritie­s to find a way to ensure that all covered by the scheme have an Aadhaar card. As per the scheme, by the second visit to the hospital, the patient has to be ready with an Aadhaar number for verificati­on. Also, the tally of hospitals empanelled across the country for the scheme stands at around 8,000, lower than the targeted number. The expectatio­n is that as the scheme catches up, more tertiary care hospitals would enroll. In addition, there’s an apprehensi­on that hospitals may not be confident of using the Ayushman portal. For that, training is being arranged. Meanwhile, letters are being sent out to the proposed beneficiar­ies of the scheme.

As of now, Telangana, Delhi and Odisha are still not on board for the scheme. But the government is hopeful.

Telangana may join as early as next week. The Ayushman Bharat scheme—popularly called Modicare— proposes to provide tertiary care cover up to ~500,000 per family to the under-privileged as per the socio- economic caste census. While ~20 billion has been provided for in the Budget, the Health Ministry has sought more funds for the scheme. Total funds required to run this scheme is estimated at ~120 billion.

The scheme will operate on two models: insurance and trust. Under the insurance model, insurance companies would be empaneled to operate as part of the scheme.

Under a trust model, a state sets up a trust and allocates sums to it. The money is transferre­d from the trust to the hospitals directly.

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