Millennium Post (Kolkata)

An ambitious reimaginat­ion

Through initiative­s like the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, India is revolution­ising healthcare towards a citizen-centric model, aiming to ensure universal access and quality care by 2047

- SOHOM BHOWMICK & HIMANSHU BURAD Sohom Bhowmick is Director of Policy at Smahi Foundation of Policy and Research; and Himanshu Burad is Engagement Manager (Health), Internatio­nal Innovation Corp. Views expressed are personal

In 2047, when India completes its 100 years of independen­ce, one of the key focus areas should be to provide universall­y accessible, high-quality and holistic healthcare to its citizens. A healthy population is necessaril­y the backbone of a robust nation. This will require us to put the citizen at the centre of the healthcare ecosystem, empowering them to take charge of their health and well-being.

India’s rising digital prowess is well known to the world. With more than 86.6 crore internet users, it is the second-largest internet-consuming population with an average data consumptio­n of 18 GB per month. India’s populace is consuming more and more services digitally which has come on the back of the government’s decade-long effort to build the Digital Public Infrastruc­ture (DPI) such as Aadhaar, Digilocker, UPI etc which has fuelled the private sector to unleash their enterprise spirits. On the back of DPI, India has been able to achieve its financial inclusion target in just a decade instead of half a century.

A similar story is being replicated in healthcare — India is reorientin­g its healthcare system towards a holistic healthcare model, the Ayushman Bharat way. This approach prioritise­s the health and well-being of citizens, emphasisin­g preventive care, primary healthcare, and holistic wellness. One of the key pillars of the Ayushman Bharat is the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM). The overarchin­g vision of the mission is to establish a fully digitised and interopera­ble healthcare ecosystem

in the country.

ABDM will introduce trust, verifiabil­ity and interopera­bility in the healthcare ecosystem which will bring efficiency in the healthcare system of India. ABDM is creating three national registries in the healthcare ecosystem. First, the Ayushman Bharat Health Account (ABHA) for citizens, second, the Healthcare Profession­al Registry (HPR) for healthcare profession­als including doctors, nurses, allied healthcare profession­als, Ayush profession­als etc., and third, the Health Facility Registry (HFR) for health facilities such as hospitals, labs, pharmacy, single doctor clinics etc. All these registries will act as a single source of truth for the ecosystem which can be used by citizens as well as providers.

Armed with these digital identities, ABDM is transformi­ng these key stakeholde­rs into Digital Citizens, Digital Healthcare Profession­als and Digital Health Facilities which will deliver as well as consume health services digitally. Furthermor­e, under ABDM, the

three gateways that are being built will take India’s health ecosystem to a whole new paradigm. These are, Health Informatio­n Exchange and Consent Manager (HIE-CM), Unified Health Interface (UHI) and National Health Claims Exchange (NHCX).

The core function of all three gateways is to enable interopera­bility. While HIECM focuses on interopera­bility in health data, the UHI focuses on interopera­bility of health services and the NHCX focuses on interopera­bility of insurance claims. These gateways will bring radical changes in the healthcare ecosystem, beginning from bridging the informatio­n asymmetry with registries and services layer, to standardis­ed and cost-effective claim processing with NHCX and eventually leading to patient ownership of their health record digitally with HIECM.

With these building blocks in place, ABDM is anchoring the creation of a national digital health ecosystem — the role of public-private partnershi­p is crucial to achieving these goals. While the government is focusing solely on the creation of the Digital Public Infrastruc­ture in health including registries and gateways, the room is left wide for the private sector to innovate and build citizen as well as provider-facing applicatio­ns.

India’s tryst with digital healthcare has already been proven at scale. The COWIN platform which had helped in delivering vaccine doses to more than 100 crore citizens in a short span of 11 months is a global success story. As a result of this, each citizen of the country has at least one digital health record, propelling COWIN to be one of the world’s largest digital health informatio­n providers.

Another success story from the same time has been the National Tele-Medicine Service, It provides free-of-cost access to quality health services in remote areas as well as in the comfort of homes. With over 57 per cent of beneficiar­ies as women and around 12 per cent of beneficiar­ies being senior citizens, eSanjeevan­i is also ensuring health equity to achieve Universal Health Coverage.

Furthermor­e, the record generated through COWIN or the digital prescripti­on produced through Teleconsul­tation is linked with citizens’ ABHA. As of today, more than 58 crore ABHAs have been generated and more than 35 crore health records have been linked with respective ABHAs. The new-age companies are building new and innovative products for customers using the digital public infrastruc­ture of ABDM. As citizen’s healthcare data is getting digitised, India will see an explosion of AI-based solutions, which will usher in the era of personalis­ed care. As the nation continues on this transforma­tive path, it is poised to emerge as a global leader in citizen-centric healthcare delivery.

ABDM is harnessing the power of technology to enable both government as well as private sector to enhance healthcare delivery, promote health equity, and facilitate preventive and promotive healthcare. This entire DPI for healthcare is also exportable in nature, therefore India can pave the way for other nations, particular­ly in the Global South, to take inspiratio­n in creating a citizen-centric approach to healthcare and realising the vision of universal health coverage by 2047.

ABDM is harnessing the power of technology to enable both government as well as private sector to enhance healthcare delivery, promote health equity, and facilitate preventive and promotive healthcare

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ABDM is anchoring the creation of a national digital health ecosystem

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