Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Digitising sector a step towards universal care

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“No new response is needed beyond trace, test, isolate and treat [strategy],” said Dr Anurag Agrawal, director, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research- Institute of Genomics and Integrativ­e Biology.

The health system strengthen­ing as part of India’s Covid-19 response will be further boosted by the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM) announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Independen­ce Day. Pilots have rolled out in the Union Territorie­s of Chandigarh, Ladakh, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, Puducherry, Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Lakshadwee­p.

“The NDHM aims to create a digital health ecosystem that encompasse­s private and public health systems to deliver improved healthcare services across the country in a highly inclusive, equitable, and secure manner. The systems built are completely digital, patientfri­endly, and totally interopera­ble,” said Vardhan.

The four key components of NDHM are national health identity, personal health records, Digi-doctor, and health facility registry. “Every Indian who wishes to participat­e has to create a unique Health ID, which will be valid across states, hospitals, diagnostic laboratori­es, and pharmacies, and will be linked for seamless flow of health informatio­n. All digital health records issued will be automatica­lly-linked to the respective Health IDS,” he said.

Health records, both legacy and new, will be accessible electronic­ally only with the consent of the patient. This framework will create a longitudin­al health track of every patient to assist the clinician in decision-making and give patients access and control of their health data.

In a move to increase access, transparen­cy, and accountabi­lity, the system has the Digi-doctor option. The option allows doctors from modern and AYUSH systems of medicine from across the country to register, get authentica­ted, share data on a web portal, and to write prescripti­ons with digital signatures.

NDHM will next be scaled up to take e-pharmacy and telemedici­ne services to all states.

The health facility registry component in NDHM will be a certified and standardis­ed repository of all health facilities in the country, including hospitals, medical colleges, diagnostic labs, pharmacies, and health and wellness centres to ensure the quality of care through regular audits, tracking outcomes and collecting feedback.

“The registry will be centrally maintained, and will store and facilitate the exchange of standardiz­ed data of both public and private health facilities in the country,” said Vardhan.

“All products have been built with the highest standards of security checks. The applicatio­ns are hosted on a highly secure Government Community Cloud. Access to the cloud is restricted with permission­s, and an advanced level of security is implemente­d. All applicatio­ns, as well as infrastruc­ture, go through rigorous security audit before utilizatio­n over the public domain,” said Vardhan.

Additional­ly, individual­s can choose where to keep their data. “There is no mandate to keep data on Government servers only,” said Vardhan. Patients also have the option of choosing the time period for which they want to grant consent.

NDHM will take India another step closer to universal health care. India’s public health expenditur­e is 1.28% of its GDP, with per capita public health expenditur­e being ~1,657 in 2017-18. For people living in rural areas completely dependent on government hospitals and clinics, the government allopathic doctor-patient ratio is 1:10,926, according to the National Health Profile 2019, leading to inequities in access.

Mainstream­ing digital health and telemedici­ne is the most transforma­tive in healthcare delivery post-covid-19, but it cannot replace a strong primary health system and connectivi­ty. For that, we need motivated healthcare workers and an enabling infrastruc­ture, which must be equally high on the government’s priority list.

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