Ayushman Bharat Yojna can deliver a healthy India
It is an innovative, inclusive and pathbreaking plan that is probably the largest public health scheme in the world
The government plans to offer 500 million unprivileged people access to government and private healthcare facilities through the recently-announced Ayushman Bharat Yojna. This will be enabled by a cover of ₹5 lakh per family annually. The scheme is portable across India and a person will be allowed cashless benefits from any public/private empanelled hospitals across the country.
Designed as an entitlement-based scheme, the Ayushman Bharat-National Health Protection Mission (AB-NHPM) is designed to deliver on the basis of the deprivation criteria. This includes, in rural areas, families with only one room with kucha walls and kucha roof, to families with no adult member between the ages of 16 and 59, to femaleheaded households with no adult male member between the ages of 16 and 59. There are families which comprise disabled members with no able-bodied adult member; SC/ST households; landless households deriving a major part of their income from manual casual labour. The scheme also automatically includes families in rural areas which answer to any one of the following: households without shelter, destitute, living on alms, manual scavenger families, primitive tribal groups, legally released bonded labour. In completion of the loop, for urban areas, 11 defined occupational categories are recognised.
One of the core principles of AB-NHPM is co-operative federalism and flexibility for states. There is provision to partner with the states through co-alliance. This will ensure appropriate integration with the existing health insurance/protection schemes of various central ministries and state governments will be allowed to expand AB-NHPM both horizontally and vertically. States will be free to choose the modalities for implementation. This must be the world’s most imaginative, most inclusive, and largest public health scheme.
To achieve sizeable gains, it is important for the government and industry to develop partnerships with a focus on improving coverage and providing access to quality healthcare services to the people.
Access to tertiary healthcare in India currently faces a huge challenge, both in terms of infrastructure and competent medical professionals, especially in rural areas. The move to open one medical college for every three parliamentary constituencies will help in addressing the challenge related to the availability of healthcare professionals in hospitals, improve access to healthcare and bridge the demand-supply gap.
India is currently in a state of health transition. Infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, dengue, H1N1 pandemic influenza and antimicrobial resistance remain a threat to health and economic security. At the same time, we have to confront the emerging problem of chronic non-communicable ailments such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and cancer, which have emerged as leading causes of mortality.