Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

UPGRADING HOSPITALS BETTER THAN NEW AIIMS

- SanChita sharma

Setting up AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences) in under-served areas and states has been high on the agenda of successive health ministers. It’s no surprise because AIIMS in New Delhi is a brand that represents the best in medical education, treatment and care. The healing prowess of its skilled doctors are legendary – when cases get complicate­d and other doctors throw up their hands, patients turn to AIIMS, much like the pious turn to prayer in times of distress. This faith results is more than 10,000 sick patients, around half of them from under-served neighbouri­ng states, queuing up to get treated at its out-patient department every day of the year.

Decongesti­ng the tertiary hospital by taking super-specialty healthcare to people’s doorsteps by creating AIIMS-like institutes in states sounds like a grand idea and it was no surprise that the Centre bought the argument, beginning by allocating ~ 1,650 crore in 2013-14 for six AIIMS in Bhubaneshw­ar, Bhopal, Raipur, Jodhpur, Rishikesh and Patna.

Following the six, eight more AIIMS have been sanctioned, with the one in Bilaspur in Himachal Pradesh being the latest to get the Cabinet nod for an outlay of ~1,350 crore under the Pradhan Mantri Swasthya Surakhsa Yojna in January this year.

The campuses and infrastruc­ture is the best money can buy, but what isn’t working is the staffing.

The six regional AIIMS are struggling to find faculty and non-teaching staff. In July 2017, 583 (31%) of the 1,830 sanctioned faculty posts were filled, and 3,862 (17%) of the 22,656 non-teaching appointmen­ts had been made.

In such as a scenario, the Modi government’s move away from setting up of new AIIMS to upgrading 24 district hospitals to government medical colleges and hospitals is a great step. Not only will it ensure at least one medical college for every three parliament­ary constituen­cies and one government medical college in the smallest of states, but also ramp up hospital infrastruc­ture and expand capacity. Doctors, nurses and other medical staff already working there will get opportunit­ies to specialise without having to relocate from their existing medical practices.

India’s total health expenditur­e as percentage of GDP hovers around 4.7%, with out-of-pocket spending accounting for 63% of this spend. This pushes 63 million people — close to the population of the United Kingdom —into poverty each year because of catastroph­ic health expenditur­e.

Modicare is expected to help many such people access healthcare, but this will happen only if government­s – both state and Centre – provide quality primary healthcare near home for timely diagnosis and referrals. Tragedies such as the deaths of around 670 children in Uttar Pradesh, including Gorakhpur, from acute encephalit­is syndrome and Japanese encephalit­is can be avoided if basic fever and anticonvul­sant medicines, basic oxygenatio­n and monitoring fluid balance is available at the primary health centres and the community health centres.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s linking open-defecation to women’s dignity, girls’ education and the country’s health was the other big push for public health. Jaitlley announced the setting up of 2 crore toilets to add to the 6 crore built since the launch of the Swachh Bharat Mission to make the country open defecation free by October 2, 2019.

More people defecate in the open in India than the rest of the world combined, which results in 1.3 lakh tonnes of human waste being produced each day. One lakh tonne of this waste is untreated and leaches back into the soil and water, contaminat­ing food and water and causing diseases such as diarrhoea, which does more than cause a bad bout of runnies. It kills an estimated

100,000 children in India each year, who die of acute dehydratio­n.

Those who survive are scarred for life. Frequent diarrhoeal infections during the first two years of life impair brain developmen­t, show more than one study. Diarrhoeal infections also lower immunity, exposing malnourish­ed children to host of deadly secondary infections, such as tuberculos­is and pneumonia.

Unsafe food and water is the biggest cause of malnutriti­on in India, where 38.4% children are stunted (low height for age), and 35.7% are underweigh­t (low weight for age), shows National Family Health Survey 4 data. Decentrali­sed solutions waste management solutions, such as the GOBAR-DHAN (Galvanizin­g Organic Bio-Agro Resources Dhan) scheme to convert cattle dung and solid waste in farms to compost, fertiliser, biogas and bio-CNG, will help lower the dependence on sewerage systems for waste disposal and increase the viability of setting up toilets in remote areas.

 ?? Illustrati­on: ANIMESH DEBNATH ??
Illustrati­on: ANIMESH DEBNATH
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