Arab Times

India’s new government ‘vows’ clampdown on healthcare graft

Drug approval agency ‘snake pit of vested interests’

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NEW DELHI, July 23, (RTRS): India’s health minister called for tougher laws on Tuesday after a media report alleged that laboratori­es had offered kickbacks to doctors who referred patients to their diagnostic centres.

Harsh Vardhan has lashed out several times in recent days against bribery in the $74 billion healthcare sector, signalling that the new government will make tackling the corruption that blighted the outgoing administra­tion a priority.

An undercover investigat­ion by Hindi news channel News Nation that ran on Monday showed footage purportedl­y of reputed private laboratori­es offering commission­s as high as 50 percent to doctors who referred patients to their diagnostic centres. Officials at one laboratory visited by the channel’s undercover reporters said they had kickback arrangemen­ts with 10,000 doctors, with monthly payments running into tens of thousands of rupees for some doctors. (http://bit.ly/Ul7PBD)

Himself a doctor with a reputation for probity, Vardhan last week called the country’s drug approval agency a “snake pit of vested interests.”

Speaking in parliament on Tuesday, he said a panel of doctors and lawyers would advise on changes to the law specifical­ly to prohibit kickbacks.

With about 40,000 laboratori­es in India, the diagnostic market is the fastest growing segment of India’s healthcare industry, according to PwC, with the segment forecast to grow to $17 billion by 2021 from $3.4 billion in 2011.

Vardhan ordered an inquiry into News Nation’s findings and asked the TV channel to submit a copy of the sting operation. He also directed the Medical Council of India to hold an emergency meeting of its ethics committee.

Private players, including listed companies, dominate the healthcare system, while government hospitals remain overcrowde­d and lack the resources to cater to growing demand.

Laboratori­es are mainly run by Indian firms, with foreign players such as Roche, Abbott and General Electric also selling diagnostic equipment in the country. “Some individual­s who are indulging in such unethical conduct should be identified and disqualifi­ed,” Vardhan said in parliament, referring to the programme’s revelation­s.

Unethical practices such as doctors receiving extra payments for referring patients to a particular test centre or receiving gifts from companies for prescribin­g their drugs are common in India, doctors say.

“The laissez-faire spirit that dominates this business in India works to the disadvanta­ge of the consumer and needs correction,” Vardhan said.

In the last few weeks, leading doctors and advocacy groups in India have teamed up to try to eradicate corruption from the healthcare system, forming anti-graft panels at hospitals and writing open letters to Vardhan. “You can’t make a difference in one day,” said Balram Bhargava, a doctor who is forming a ‘Society for Less Investigat­ive Medicine’ at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences.” World Bank President Jim Young Kim (left), shakes hands with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi before their meeting in New Delhi on

July 23. Jim Yong Kim is on a three-day visit to India. (AFP) Indian parents of school children along with activists of various child rights organisati­ons protest against school management over the recent sexual harassment of a 6-year-old schoolgirl, in Bangalore on July 19. Angry parents staged protests outside the premises of the Vibgyor High School demanding that its management take responsibi­lity for the alleged rape of a six-year-old girl on the school

premises. (AFP)

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