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This collection of essays is a deep dive into India’s health economy, posing pertinent questions to policymake­rs as well as practition­ers of health care.

- Reality Check

Public Health and Private Wealth – Stem Cells, Surrogates and Other Strategic Bodies:

The intriguing­ly titled volume Public Health and Private Wealth edited by Sarah Hodges and Mohan Rao, gains resonance in the wake of the recently released National Health Policy of the Government of India. It is an eclectic collection of essays by wellqualif­ied medical researcher­s and health care experts. In their introducti­on, the editors identify three “problemati­cs” for further exploratio­n – a historical perspectiv­e on the interplay of science, technology and medicine; the varied careers of the hospital in independen­t India; and the history of official science policy. An afterword critiques the indigenous turn in science.

The first part – The Quest for Improvemen­t – kicks off with David Arnold’s seminal analysis of colonial poverty. Arnold’s central argument is that in India’s colonial era, poverty was essentiall­y seen as the consequenc­e of disease rather than one of its underlying causes. Well-researched examples add heft to the author’s thesis. From the general to the particular, Lakshmi Kutty examines tuberculos­is as the quintessen­tial disease of poverty. Kutty traces how dominant policy understand­ings of TB in the ‘50s focused on political questions of poverty and deprivatio­n. By the 1980s, however, the narrative changed and recourse was taken to techno-scientific solutions. Now, with drug-resistant TB raising its ugly head, the challenge remains to reconcile these divergent approaches to the disease and its treatment.

Rebecca William’s essay focuses on the Khanna study, a well-known ‘applied research’ population control experiment run in the Ludhiana district of Punjab during the 1950s by researcher­s from Harvard. Williams concludes that the study isolated the bodies of the poor from their social, economic and political contexts, and transforme­d them into objects of medical knowledge and management. An important question left largely unaddresse­d by Williams is how research should be reconfigur­ed.

The second part poses the crucial question: “India’s Hospitals: For Whom?” Ramila Bisht and Altaf Virani review the health care landscape of Mumbai. Their cogently argued conclusion – that ill-designed public-private partnershi­p ( PPP) are a poor substitute to strengthen­ing the public health care system – is a timely warning to India’s health mandarins. As is Rama Baru’s ‘Commercial­isation and the Poverty of Public Health Services in India’. Baru argues that, over the last six decades, in India, the private sector has become much more assertive and influentia­l in shaping health policy at the state and national levels.

Myth-busting is a popular sport and Sarah Hodges slays reputation­s with gleeful irreverenc­e. She makes two important points. First, that PR and image management played a significan­t role in the success of Apollo. Secondly, most

Public Health and Private Wealth: Stem Cells, Surrogates and Other Strategic Bodies

The book is not afraid to talk truth to power, nor does it balk at aiming potshots at the holy cows of the health sector

multi-speciality hospitals succeeded both therapeuti­cally as well as financiall­y because they made very selective and strategic choices about their investment­s in specialisa­tions. Touché!

The concluding section, ‘National Techno-science and Promising Bodies’, is the book’s weakest link. Mohan Rao’s essay ‘The Globalisat­ion of Reproducti­on in India’ is interestin­g in that it forges a link between overpopula­tion and eugenics in family planning in India. But his view of surrogacy as sexual and reproducti­ve slavery, although thought-provoking, is rendered passé by the introducti­on of the Surrogacy Bill in Parliament. Priya Ranjan’s article, ‘Biotechnol­ogy in India’, is a routine historical account and has no fresh insights to offer.

Rohini Kandhari, in her essay, observes that while state-sponsored basic research into stem cells remains preliminar­y, venture capitalist­s have exploited this unregulate­d medical scene. This has contribute­d to an extraordin­ary availabili­ty of speculativ­e stem cell treatments. Kandhari would have done well to explore in greater detail the need for an independen­t regulator in this cutting-edge medical sector.

In the afterword, philosophe­r and historian Dhruv Raina shows how the interest in indigenous knowledge emerged in tandem with the politicisa­tion of indigenous groups and indigenous rights movements. Unfortunat­ely, Raina misses the opportunit­y to discuss the growing role – and relevance – of AYUSH in Indian health care.

Aimed at the medical researcher rather than the lay reader, the book offers fascinatin­g material to policymake­rs as well as practition­ers of health care. It is not afraid to talk truth to power, nor does it balk at aiming potshots at the holy cows of the health sector, be they corporate hospitals, government health care schemes or quick fixes like PPPS.

On the negative side, the book has a tendency to lapse into jargon or become too pedantic. But overall, it is a welcome addition to the burgeoning literature on Indian health care. ~

 ??  ?? BY SARAH HODGES & MOHAN RAO PAGES: 272 PRICE: ` 850 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
BY SARAH HODGES & MOHAN RAO PAGES: 272 PRICE: ` 850 OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

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