NITI pitches key reforms in new health care report
NEW DELHI: NITI Aayog has proposed structural reforms in the health sector with focus on four key areas -- health system risk pool financing, health services, organisation, and digital health care -- in its report “Health System for a New India: Building Blocks - Potential Pathways to Reform”, according to government documents and people familiar with the matter.
The report is scheduled to be released on Monday by NITI Aayog vice-chairman Rajiv Kumar and Bill Gates, co-chairman of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The government think-tank has drafted a 15-year plan with the aim of transforming the health sector.
“A three-year action agenda and a seven-year strategy have already been prepared by NITI Aayog. We are now engaging in developing a 15-year vision document for the nation’s development... This book is an attempt to bring together all the valuable findings of the studies, including supporting data from this analysis. With regards to financing, the book talks of improving financial risk protection and reforming fiscal transfers. For better provisioning of health
care services, strengthening primary care, accelerating human resource development, implementing digital information systems, and improving access to quality medicines are some of the suggested areas of focus,” Niti Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant wrote in the report, whose foreword was accessed by HT.
In June, NITI Aayog also released its health index rankings that mapped the state of health care across states. Kerala emerged at the top of the second edition of NITI Aayog’s report. Uttar Pradesh was rated as the worst as per the parameters. In its latest report, the think-tank has proposed a “complete transformation” of India’s health system.
“There remains a need to strengthen the broad ecosystem
in which health services are delivered. For this, we need to chart a clear road map to the complete transformation of India’s health system...our vision for a healthy India requires us to holistically transform the delivery of health services in both public and the private sectors, across levels of care,” said Dr Vinod Paul, member, NITI Aayog.
“At a system level, overcoming the challenges of fragmentation, across health care financing and service delivery, will help us optimise both quality and access. For a large country like ours, efforts aimed at aggregation and standardisation will contribute to enhancing both efficiency and quality. Achieving this will require us to make major institutional changes,” he added. The think-tank has also suggested that India’s public and private financing system of health care needs to be regularised and become more economical. “Instead of looking at schemes in the health sector, we are not focusing on sectoral reforms. With the help of international consultants and local experts we have key areas of focus. The system of public and private health care financing needs to be looked at. The system is fragmented and we need to see how to bring in regularisation. We have to find a way to make purchasing more economical,” said a senior NITI Aayog official who asked not to be named. Dr K Srinath Reddy, president, Public Health Foundation of India, said, “Health care financing should be consolidated. The private sector too should be brought in to contribute in the scheme for universal health care. However, while building a single-payer system, we must also strengthen public health care otherwise the private sector will emerge dominant.”
A single-payer health care system is a type of universal health care financed by taxes that covers the costs of essential health care for all residents, with costs covered by a single public system.
JAMSHEDPUR: Senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Saryu Roy said on Sunday that he has resigned from the state cabinet and assembly, adding that he will contest the upcoming state elections against chief minister Raghubar Das as an independent.
The 68-year-old held the post of minister of food and supply in the Das cabinet and was a sitting legislator from Jamshedpur (West). The BJP on Sunday fielded Devendra Singh as the party’s candidate from the seat.
The state’s chief minister is a legislator from Jamshedpur (East) and was named as the BJP candidate from the constituency in the first list of candidates released on November 10.
“I am going to fight from Jamshedpur (East) seat to take on the man whom the party has made the face of this election,” Roy, who was not featured in the BJP’S first four lists said.
Roy in the past questioned the functioning of the state government, even filing a petition in the high court against the state’s mining department
“The problem is when I raise corruption issues some people have a problem and brand it as anti-party activities,” he said. Union minister Prakash Javadekar, who was in Ranchi to inaugurate the party’s media centre, said the BJP would look into Roy’s decision to contest as an independent.
15-year plan with focus on four issues to transform sector will be released today