Business Standard

States not on same page on digital health mission

Tamil Nadu plans parallel programme with unique user IDS

- SHINE JACOB & SOHINI DAS

As India gears up to roll out Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) across the country, states are not on the same page.

While states like Tamil Nadu say they would run a parallel digital health programme with unique user IDS, others feel running a parallel scheme may create confusion.

States like Tamil Nadu aim to take a distinct approach to implementi­ng the ABDM. It plans to link the unique health identifica­tion (UHID) with the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM), but none of the vital data of a patient’s health will be shared with the Centre.

The state has already invited expression­s of interest for technologi­cal support from industrial players for which almost 10 players, including Tech Mahindra, Zoho Corporatio­n and Armaan, have shown interest, said sources. The target by the state is to create 66 million UHIDS.

When contacted, state health secretary J Radhakrish­nan told Business Standard that the idea is to integrate all the state health programmes into one health ID. But this will be done without divulging whether it would be integrated with the NDHM.

“Only necessary indicators of these will be linked with the ABDM, while all the data will be with the individual. It will be used as a proxy ID for all the 134 state health schemes,” said another state official. The state has also lined up a differenti­al privacy policy, based on which three entities – citizen, health practition­ers and the government – will have separate privacy parameters.

When it comes to implementi­ng central schemes, the track record is not uniform — West Bengal, for example, is yet to even implement the Ayushman Bharat health insurance scheme.

Chhattisga­rh, on the other hand, is not keen on having a dual system. The state’s health secretary Alok Shukla said there is no point in having multiple identifica­tions. “There is no requiremen­t for a separate health ID as we already have Aadhaar as a unique ID. Everything can be linked to that,” he said.

States like Gujarat say it has already integrated its state health insurance scheme with the Prime Minister Jan Arogya Yojna (PMJAY). Now, it can leverage this database of 6.5 million families and take their consent to on-board them on ABDM.

Speaking to Business Standard, Jaiprakash Shivhare, health commission­er of Gujarat, said it will follow the central guidelines for digital health mission and create unique IDS for that.

“We already have a database of 6.5 million families, who are a part of the health insurance schemes like PMJAY and state health insurance schemes. We can proceed by seeking consent from these individual­s, following data privacyrel­ated guidelines,” he said.

Additional chief secretary of Maharashtr­a Pradeep Vyas confirmed that there was no plan to have any parallel digital health ID or programme in the state. The ABDM implementa­tion is expected to have teething troubles.

Public health experts are not very confident about the pilot that was run in six union territorie­s as a benchmark for a national roll out. The pilot was launched in August 2020 in Chandigarh, Ladakh, Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu, Puducherry, Andaman and Nicobar Islands and Lakshadwee­p.

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