The Sunday Guardian

AIIMS-LIKE HOSPITALS ACROSS INDIA A DISTANT POSSIBILIT­Y PENDING AIIMS

- CONTINUED FROM P1

open two new AIIMSlike i nstitution­s i n Jharkhand and Gujarat. The idea of opening AIIMS level institutes in different parts of the country was mooted with the objective of correcting regional imbalances in the availabili­ty of affordable and reliable tertiary healthcare services and also to augment facilities for quality medical education in the country. The move was aimed at creating AIIMS like facilities in states so that people did not have to come all the way to New Delhi for treatment. However, even after 12 years, not a single AIIMS has come up to do the job done by AIIMS in New Delhi, said a source.

Speaking to this newspaper, former vice president of the Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA) Ajay Kumar Singh said, “It’s unfortunat­e that none of the regional AIIMS has attained the standard, which can even marginally match with the Delhi AIIMS. The total concept is somewhere missing. There is a need to involve the local government in the entire process so that these become regional hubs 1. AIIMS Gorakhpur (UP) 2. AIIMS Mangalagir­i (AP) 3. AIIMS Kalyani (West Bengal) 4. AIIMS Nagpur (Maharashtr­a) 5. AIIMS Kamrup (Assam) 6. AIIMS Bathinda (Punjab) 7. AIIMS Samba (Jammu and Kashmir) 8. AIIMS Pulwama (Jammu and Kashmir) 9. AIIMS Himachal Pradesh (location not finalized) 10. AIIMS Bihar (location not finalized) 11. AIIMS Tamil Nadu (location not finalized) for good health care.”

In the 2004-05 interim budget, the A.B. Vajpayee-led NDA government first announced the setting up of six regional AIIMS in Bihar, Chhattisga­rh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttarancha­l (now Uttarakhan­d). It proposed to upgrade one medical college each in Andhra Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Jharkhand, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal, to the level of AIIMS.

However, not only did successive UPA government­s took around 10 years to complete these projects, but they also did not announce any new AIIMS, except for one in Rae Bareli (the constituen­cy of Congress president Sonia Gandhi) and one in Raiganj, West Bengal (the constituen­cy of former Union minister Deepa Dasmunsi), in 2009.

After coming to power, the UPA government, in its full budget in 2004-05, announced that work on these six regional AIIMS (earlier announced by the NDA) would start from next year, under the Pradhan Mantri Swasthya Suraksha Yojana (PMSSY).

Because of the delay by the UPA I and II, so far only five new AIIMS at Bhopal, Bhubaneswa­r, Jodhpur, Patna, Raipur and Rishikesh, are functional, that too partially. The AIIMS at Rae Bareli is still under constructi­on, while only pre-investment activities have been initiated for an AIIMS at Mangalagir­i (Andhra Pradesh), Kalyani (West Bengal) and Nagpur (Maharashtr­a).

Soon after coming to power, the Narendra Modi government decided to revive the earlier effort of opening regional AIIMS. In Union Budget 2015-16, six new AIIMS were announced—in Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Himachal Pradesh, Assam and Bihar (second AIIMS). Besides, there was a proposal to open four more AIIMS in Andhra Pradesh, West Bengal, Vidarbha in Maharashtr­a and Poorvancha­l in UP. The government also announced two AIIMS in this year’s budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India