BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

Is health on your manifesto this election?

- PT Jyothi Datta

In his State of the Union address earlier this month, the US President Joe Biden said, “We finally beat Big Pharma”, outlining measures to bring down medicine prices, including insulin.

A reduction in drug prices is welcome by patients/citizens anywhere in the world, but in an election year for the US, it is also being seen in some quarters as a campaign speech of sorts.

Back home, the last few weeks have seen a slew of activity involving healthcare and pharmaceut­icals — and at the highest levels. There’s been the launch of several AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences) facilities, the inaugurati­on of 40 drug and medical device manufactur­ing units and more recently, the updation of an ethical code defining the red line between doctors and drugmakers, to name a few recent developmen­ts.

But in an election year for India, will health feature on the manifestos of political parties and be a rallying point in campaign speeches, as seen in other developed countries?

There is a lot more attention on health, agrees Srinath Reddy, founder and former president, Public Health Foundation of India. However, what he looks for, is “greater emphasis on primary healthcare”, both infrastruc­ture and workforce, as they play a pivotal role as the first line of defence.

The role of ASHA (Accredited Social Health Activists) and anganwadi workers and auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs) cannot be emphasised enough — in the immensely successful child immunisati­on programmes and the more recent Covid19lin­ked developmen­ts, to name a few. In fact, drugmakers working with State government­s look to equip them with tools for screening, data capture etc. And yet, these footsoldie­rs are seen protesting for better salaries and recognitio­n.

Reddy calls for strengthen­ing the building blocks in delivering Universal Health Coverage (UHC) — be it frontline workers, primary health centres or district hospitals. They help capture and tackle common disorders before it escalates, requiring a tertiary hospital to treat — thereby reducing the healthcare cost to the government, he explains.

HEALTH MANIFESTO

As the country tackles noncommuni­cable diseases and mental health concerns, Reddy calls for doubling this human resource, bringing back male ANMs and definitely ensuring better salaries for them.

In its Health Manifesto 2024, the Indian Medical Associatio­n (IMA) calls for a taxbased system of health financing. “Contributo­ry health insurance offers incomplete coverage and restricted services,” it says.

The health allocation at 1.11.6 per cent of GDP is one of the world’s lowest it said, adding that expenditur­e incurred on health determinan­ts like drinking water, sanitation should be provided separately. “The minimum allocation for Health alone should be around 2.5 percent of the GDP,” it said, calling for an increase in national health expenditur­e to 5 per cent of GDP.

Reddy agrees on increasing healthspen­ds. But even the 2.5 percent projection would be well used, if prioritise­d and put into strengthen­ing primary healthcare, he says. It’s on this, that digital measures and initiative­s like the Ayushman Bharat health insurance coverage can further build. The health insurance programme (that is being reviewed) needs to be preventive in nature, rather than covering hospitalis­ation costs, he adds, further optimising cost for the government.

CITIZEN RIGHTS

Brinelle D’Souza, CoConvenor, Jan Swasthya Abhiyan (Mumbai), says, health is likely to get lost in the noise and din of this time’s election campaigns. Political parties don’t seem to be centrestag­ing health, instead it is about competitiv­e welfarism, she says, when they should be talking about a citizen’s right to health and education. Citing the UK and Canada, she said, they discuss funding and other healthrela­ted issues. Even a freemarket country like the US, talks about healthcare and medicine costs and pharma and insurance companies are pushed to give value for citizens, says D’Souza, also Chairperso­n, Centre for Health and Mental Health, School of Social Work, Tata Institute of Social Sciences.

The IMA manifesto also calls for revival of the Indian Medical Services, which was discontinu­ed in 1948. Covid19 exposed the vulnerabil­ity of the healthcare system and brought to fore the grave paucity of profession­alism in health management, it observed.

Public health experts want the elected political representa­tives to address critical issues, including the shortage of healthcare practition­ers and quality of medicines, for example. Just days ago, a fake cancer drug racket was busted in Delhi, a worrying thought of how many fly below the radar.

D’Souza says, “access to healthcare and affordabil­ity should be part of election campaigns (here), but it’s not. The middle class should make it a campaign issue, involving the community, otherwise it will not make a difference.”

My most refreshing exercises involve nature — forest walks, mountain treks and wildlife photograph­y. It opens every pore, recharges my soul.

Kulfi:

I engage in 10100 minutes of daily meditation for mental well being, read a new nonfiction book every month and newspapers daily. Stress control involves movies, massages, music and quality time with dogson, Kulfi.

Sleep:

Seven hours of early, uninterrru­pted sleep — disengagin­g from stressful activities an hour before bedtime.

Food:

Diet excludes sugar, excessive salt, white rice and red meat. Focus is on millet, vegetables, fish, dairy, fruits and dark chocolate at night. Black coffee kickstarts my mornings.

 ?? RITURAJKON­WAR ?? FIRST LINE OF DEFENCE. Strengthen­ing primary healthcare is key to achieving Universal Health Coverage in India
RITURAJKON­WAR FIRST LINE OF DEFENCE. Strengthen­ing primary healthcare is key to achieving Universal Health Coverage in India

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India