Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Fall in hospitalis­ations in 2017-18 compared to 2014

One in three ailing people reported having suffered an infection in NSO survey

- Vijdan Mohammad Kawoosa letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: Did Indians get healthier between 2014 and 2017-18? After all fewer Indians reported ailments or required hospitalis­ation in 2017-18 as compared to 2014.

The findings of the latest survey on the state of India’s health by the National Statistica­l Office shows that the number of Indians reporting ailments dropped by 2.1 percentage points in rural areas and 2.7 percentage points in urban areas between 2014 and 2017-18. These findings are based on ailments reported by people in the 15 days preceding the survey.

The survey also found that the share of the population admitted to a hospital in the year preceding the survey dropped by nearly one percentage point in both rural and urban areas between 2014 and 2017-18. Interestin­gly, the proportion of those reporting ailments and those hospitalis­ed rose between 1995-96 and 2014, according to three NSO surveys on health in this period.

INFECTION WAS MOST COMMON AILMENT

It was also the most cited reason for hospitalis­ation. One in three ailing people reported having suffered an infection.

Cardiovasc­ular disease was the second most reported ailment, followed by endocrine and metabolic disorders (body’s overor under-production of certain hormones and disorders affecting the body’s ability to process certain nutrients and vitamins), and respirator­y diseases.

Three in four ailing people suffered one of these diseases.

However when it comes to hospitalis­ation,infection was also the leading cause for hospitalis­ation (31.5% people were hospitalis­ed with an infection). While cardiovasc­ular disease was the second most reported ailment, it was the fourth biggest cause of hospitalis­ation, trailing injuries and gastrointe­stinal diseases.

MOST DO NOT HAVE HEALTH INSURANCE

Nearly 86% people in rural India and 81% in urban India are not covered by health insurance . As a result, about four in five Indians pay for hospitalis­ation out of their household income or savings. Indeed, 13.4% people in rural areas and 8.5% in urban areas borrow money to pay their hospital expenses.

These figures significan­tly vary among states. For example, nearly everyone in rural Goa and 98% people in urban Goa pay for their hospital expenses out of their household income or savings, while only 52% people in rural Andhra Pradesh and 65% in urban Andhra Pradesh use household income or savings. Andhra Pradesh has the highest proportion of people who borrow money to pay for hospital expenses – 28% in rural areas and 16% in urban areas.

~16,000-25,000 PAID FOR EACH HOSPITAL VISIT

A single case of hospitalis­ation costs on average Rs 16,676 in rural India and Rs 26,475 in urban areas. As expected, being admitted in a private hospital costs a lot more than a government hospital – six times more in rural areas and eight times more in urban areas. A spell of hospitalis­ation in urban areas costs ~38,822 in a private hospital on average, compared to ~4,837 in a government hospital.

INDIANS SPEND 7 DAYS IN HOSPITAL ON

AVERAGE

On average, a person who is hospitalis­ed in India stays admitted for 6.9 days. But a person admitted to a private hospital is likely to stay admitted for a day more than a person admitted to a government hospital. Nearly 71.7% patients in government hospitals and 66.4% in private hospitals are discharged in less than seven days.

The time spent in a hospital also depends on the kind of ailment a person has. For example, a cancer patient admitted to a hospital spends an average of 13.2 days in the hospital while one with an eye ailment spends only three days. Psychiatri­c and neurologic­al patients spend the second highest time in hospitals, 8.7 days on average, followed by those admitted with injuries, who spend 8.3 days on average.

Professor Indranil Mukhopadhy­ay, who teaches public health at Jindal School of Government and Public Policy, said it needs to be studied why the number of people reporting ailments and those being hospitalis­ed has dropped.

“It’s very strange and counterint­uitive because throughout the world there’s no evidence that utilisatio­n of healthcare has dropped with increasing income and availabili­ty of health care,” he said.

However, he said one reason for a drop in the number of people reporting ailments could be the seasonalit­y of the survey.

“It’s for the first time in two decades that a full round of the health survey was conducted, which means that it was conducted throughout the year unlike six-monthly surveys in the past two rounds.”

50,465 1,026 Madhya Pradesh

24,095

Dadar & Nagar Haveli

684

Chhattisga­rh

5,731

Maharashtr­a

327,031

Telangana

47,705

Goa

4,027 785 8,336 2,179

Bihar

1,109 Jharkhand

28,564 6,195

Odisha

18,757

Andhra Pradesh

58,668

Puducherry

Tamil Nadu

180,643 4,965 418 647 4,944 25,574 87 1,318

5,890

*Data compiled by covid19ind­ia.org and cross-checked from inputs by HT’S correspond­ents and news agencies. 'Cases reassigned to states' is as per data released by the MOHFW. This figure has not been included in the calculatio­n for the daily new cases.

720 16,257 448

Karnataka

3,649

71,069

Kerala

13,994 79 133 174

20,952

106,118

22,744

36,423

4,114 182,217

36,385

2,449

25,459

18,741

2,942

126,670

Andaman and Nicobar

207 4

Total cases in India*

Deaths due to Covid-19

Cases being reassigned to states

152

2004

2014

2017-18

 ??  ??

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