Deccan Chronicle

It’s time to prioritise primary healthcare

- Rajeev Ahuja The writer is a developmen­t economist, formerly with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the World Bank. Email: ahujaahuja@yahoo.com

Primary healthcare in most Indian states is in shambles. This is despite a national flagship programme, National Rural Health Mission, having run for more than a decade and having pumped public investment­s of over `1.3 lakh crores from 2005-06 to 2014-15. NRHM, which was aimed at strengthen­ing government health delivery system in rural areas with a focus on the primary care, was launched in 2005 with much fanfare and hope. Then, the commitment of the Central political leadership to the health sector was high; and so were ambitions. Those ambitions were backed by greater availabili­ty of public funding which was made possible by faster economy growth.

NRHM repacked many Central programmes such as reproducti­ve and child health, immunisati­on, contracept­ion, training, etc. as well as supported many new activities such as training of new cadre of health workers, upgradatio­n of public health facilities, constituti­on of patient welfare committees, etc. — all in a flexible, decentrali­sed manner.

Despite all this, a special health survey conducted by the National Sample Survey Organisati­on in 2014 reports that only 28 per cent of total non-hospitalis­ed cases in rural areas are actually treated by public health facilities. This implies that a vast majority of rural folks needing non-hospitalis­ed care actually end up going to private providers, paying out of their pockets at the point of care. It is no surprise that 60 per cent of total healthcare expenditur­e in India is private expenditur­e and most of it is out-of-pocket, with pernicious effects on the finances of poorer households.

One big lesson that emerged from the experience of NRHM is that the states have to be in driver’s seat in prioritisi­ng, designing, financing and implementi­ng the primary care agenda. The Central government can at best provide some financial incentives and technical guidance to states that prioritise the primary care. But a call to strengthen the primary care is that of states.

The legacy of a weak primary healthcare system in the country could be considered as an opportunit­y to move to an innovative, low-cost care delivery model, which is made possible due to technologi­cal innovation­s. For example, teleconsul­tation, tele-medicine and tele-radiology have the potential to overcome access barriers, economise on the scarcer factors such as doctors by reducing patients’ need to have face-to-face encounter with doctors, improve patient satisfacti­on and so forth. To give another example, a trained nurse, guided by computer algorithms, can be made capable to evaluate and prescribe drugs for certain conditions. Similarly, technology can be deployed in many other ways to strengthen accountabi­lity, bring transparen­cy, make field workers more effective and so forth. A transforma­tive, low-cost model has to integrate various innovative pieces into developing a robust primary care system that also addresses the emerging non-communicab­le disease burden among population. A primary care system ought to be the first point of contact for all medical needs (preventive, promotive and curative care) of the population, and need to serve as the referral point.

What is needed is a few states taking a big leap in this direction. The states that move first will need to pilot a few low-cost care delivery models in order to discover an appropriat­e model that can be taken to scale. Those states need to increase their health spending, which is woefully low at present, is a well-known fact.

It is in the Central government’s own interest to see the states prioritise primary healthcare as that will help the country meet its health-related commitment under sustainabl­e developmen­t goals. Further, when the Central government is strengthen­ing the tertiary care in the country by setting up new AIIMS hospitals as well as new cancer institutes, a robust primary care is also needed from the health system efficiency perspectiv­e — to mitigate the flow of patients to hospitals by “catching” them early. So even in the primary healthcare, the Central government does have a role: to ensure that at least a few states prioritise primary healthcare.

Once a few states have taken the lead in redesignin­g their primary care delivery system, the pulls and pressures that usually accompany any developmen­t process, will necessitat­e the lagging states to follow suit and also benefit from cross-learnings.

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