Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘India on road to achieve universal health cover’

-

NEWDELHI: India’s front-line health workers and surveillan­ce infrastruc­ture that helped eradicate polio will strengthen primary health and scale up Ayushman Bharat, but the world needs far more preparedne­ss against a fast-moving airborne pandemic, Christophe­r Elias, president of the Global Developmen­t Division, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation told

Sanchita Sharma.

Do you think Ayushman Bharat will work?

I’m excited about Ayushman Bharat, which addresses both financial protection as well as strengthen­ing the primary healthcare system by building on the largest per capita of number of frontline health workers with the Ashas (accredited social health activists), anganwadi workers and ANMS (auxiliary nurse midwives). It is early days and it has had a rapid expansion in the first 100 days to reach quite a few people but it has an ambition to reach a lot more... as it proceeds, it will learn where it needs to adapt and strengthen.

How can India keep up its universal immunisati­on (intensifie­d Indradhanu­sh) momentum, given that there is no endgame, like for polio?

There is no endgame but there is a clear goal, which is 90% plus universal immunisati­on coverage for basic childhood vaccines. The number of new vaccines that India has introduced in the last few years is unpreceden­ted – the MR vaccine, pneumococc­al vaccine, rotavirus vaccine, injectible polio vaccine, the switch from bivalent to trivalent polio vaccine... What mission Indradhanu­sh has done is build a strong momentum in the immunisati­on field so it can both increase coverage and introduce new vaccines. To keep up that momentum, you need strengthen­ing the logistics and to support that cold chain reaching everywhere. The other is good vaccine-preventabl­e disease surveillan­ce. India has probably the largest and most effective polio surveillan­ce programme in the world. Since polio is gone, there has been a...broadening of focus of the National Polio Surveillan­ce Programme to look at broader vaccine-preventabl­e disease surveillan­ce.

Does India need to add more vaccines to its routine immunisati­on programme?

The biggest impact will come by expanding the recently introduced rotavirus and pneumococc­al conjugate vaccine at the national level against the most common causes of childhood mortality, diarrhoeal disease and pneumonia.

Is India on course to achieve universal health coverage? Yes, you are headed in the right direction. You are not there yet, very few countries are. But you are addressing the key factors -- protection against financial ruin and strengthen­ing primary healthcare. It’s a long road, it’s sometimes bumpy...

What will be the next big public health challenge for the world? Can I give you two? One is the certain and slow challenge, which is the rising incidence of NCDS (non-communicab­le diseases). The best way to deal with NCDS is primary healthcare (PHC)...YOU need preventive and promotive treatment, which is best provided through the frontline workers through the PHC system. The second is a less certain and more acute risk of a significan­t airborne pandemic. Ever since the Ebola outbreak five years ago, we have been focused on the preparedne­ss for haemorrhag­ic fevers like Ebola or other viral diseases like MERS (Middle East respirator­y syndrome), Nipah or Lassa fever. Those are challengin­g, but they are not airborne.

If we were to see today an outbreak like the world saw a hundred years ago with the Spanish flu, we are not prepared. Not just India, United States, nobody is prepared for a fast-moving airborne high fatality epidemic. A hundred years ago, in 1918, the Spanish flu spread quickly around the world. That was before we had planes... The closest thing we saw was the H1N1 outbreak (popularly referred to as swine flu) in 2010 and that was in eight countries...

In the 20th century, we had three pandemics of influenza; so far in the 21st century, we’ve had one. We know based on the history of the 20th century that we are likely to see a big influenza pandemic in this century.

The world is not prepared in terms of medical or policy infrastruc­ture, vis-a-vis transporta­tion and trade. We must get the right medical counter-measures developed (and global partnershi­ps) like the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s (CEPI), which is investing specifical­ly in Nipah, MERS and Lassa fever.

There are all kinds of things we didn’t know about...we have to be ready for the completely unknown, something called pathogen X.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India