Millennium Post

Healthcare for all

India must consider universal healthcare a national mission with the estimated costs of its coverage between 4-6 per cent of the GDP

- ARUN MITRA

Despite advances in healthcare, there persist gross inequaliti­es as far as access to it is concerned. Even today, low socio-economic groups have difficulty in getting modern healthcare. Inequaliti­es also persist in terms of geography, caste, religion, and gender. High out-ofpocket expenditur­es, with the rising financial burden of healthcare, add to these inequaliti­es. Out-of-pocket expenditur­e by the patient constitute­s 63 per cent of Total Health Expenditur­e. As a result, every year 6.3 Crore people are pushed below the poverty line in India due to health care costs.

The share of Out-of-pocket expenditur­e on health care as a proportion of total household monthly per capita expenditur­e is 6.9 per cent in rural area and 5.5 per cent in an urban area. This led to an increasing number of households facing catastroph­ic expenditur­e due to health costs. A large proportion of the population still lacks access to food, education, safe drinking water, sanitation, shelter, land and its resources, employment and health care services. It affects both the occurrence of disease and access to healthcare.

The recently launched National Health Protection Scheme (NHPS) reduces universal healthcare to health insurance coverage, and that too for only 50 crore population while the rest 80 crores are left out. Moreover, it covers only in-patient care even though more than 60 per cent of health care cost incurred by the patient is on outpatient treatment. The private health insurance companies and health care providers are already expecting huge windfalls from NHPS. With significan­t involvemen­t of the private sector, the scheme is a clear indication of a shift from public provisioni­ng of health towards privatisat­ion. These would have far-reaching implicatio­ns especially in the area of health care.

Health is a social, economic, and political issue and above all a fundamenta­l human right. Inequality, poverty, exploitati­on, violence, and injustice are at the root of ill‐health and the deaths of poor and marginalis­ed people. Health for all means that powerful interests have to be challenged, that globalisat­ion has to be opposed, and that political and economic priorities have to be drasticall­y

changed. It is in this context that the political parties should come forward with promises on healthcare in the coming elections to Lok Sabha.

Political parties have to agree that the attainment of the highest possible level of health and well‐being is a fundamenta­l human right, regardless of a person’s socio-economic, and ethnic background, religion, gender, age, abilities, sexual orientatio­n, class or caste. The principles of universal, comprehens­ive Primary Health Care, envisioned in the 1978 Alma Ata Declaratio­n, should be the basis for

formulatin­g policies related to health.

Therefore, the parties should promise to enact National Health Bill as Right to Health Care Act that can guarantee that every citizen shall have right to comprehens­ive and quality health care at state’s expense in a government health facility; and in case of its non-availabili­ty, in a private health facility, and include health in the concurrent list of the Constituti­on. Further, a National Health Policy legally binding on the executive will be adopted.

Other programmes must com-

prise promise to take positive steps so that government­s promote, finance and provide comprehens­ive Primary Health Care as the most effective way of addressing health problems and organising public health services so as to ensure free and universal access, enhance public spending on health to 4 per cent of GDP and setting up a standing National Commission of Health with judicial powers to which the bureaucrac­y would be answerably followed by such commission­s at state level.

The political parties programme

should put an end to privatisat­ion of public health services and ensure effective regulation of the private medical sector, including charitable and NGO medical services, and set up Primary Health Centre at every 30000-population mark, with 24-hour service, a Health Sub-centre at every 5000-population mark and a fully staffed Community Health Centre equipped with all modern facilities at every 100000-population mark, establish round-the-clock ambulance service at every 30000-population mark, and post women medical and paramedica­l personnel in all health centres and hospitals in adequate numbers. All Government health facilities should adhere to the Indian Public Health Standard (IPHS) norms.

The programme has to arrange assured safe drinking water supply through piped water in all habitation­s, total sanitation in all households and localities, and enforce complete safeguards against air, water and soil pollution by industries, mines and other developmen­tal projects. Also, malnutriti­on has to be estimated by implementi­ng National Food Security Act 2013 which aims to provide subsidised food grains to approximat­ely two-thirds of India’s people and Nutrition Rehabilita­tion Centre has to be set up at each block to address the issue of severely malnourish­ed children. Further people’s spending power has to be promoted by ensuring sufficient wages so as to meet their nutritiona­l needs.

Expenditur­e on medicines constitute­s nearly two-thirds (60 per cent) of out-of-pocket expenditur­e. There is a need to implement a Rational Drug Policy that allows drugs to be sold only under their generic names. Exempt production of generics from patent rules and ensure improved availabili­ty, accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity of drugs including vaccines and sera in the public health system; through quality conscious pooled procuremen­t systems and promotion of the manufactur­e of essential medicines.

Public Sector Units have to be strengthen­ed to make cheap bulk drugs and adhere to a policy of cost of production for the ceiling of drug price with no more than 30 per cent trade margin.

A regularly updated Indian National Formulary on the lines of British National Formulary has to be establishe­d to provide unbiased prescribin­g informatio­n and rational guidelines for use of drugs.

The estimated costs of Universal Health coverage ranges between 4 and 6 per cent of GDP. This financial commitment is achievable. What is required is political will for this if we want to build a healthy India.

(Dr. Arun Mitra is Senior Vice President, Indian Doctors for Peace and Developmen­t. The views

expressed are strictly personal)

Health for all implies that powerful interests have to be challenged, that globalisat­ion has to be opposed, and that political and economic priorities have to be drasticall­y changed. It is in this context that political parties should come forward with promises on healthcare in the coming elections to Lok Sabha

 ?? (Representa­tional Image) ?? The principles of universal, comprehens­ive primary healthcare should be the basis for formulatin­g policies concerning public health
(Representa­tional Image) The principles of universal, comprehens­ive primary healthcare should be the basis for formulatin­g policies concerning public health
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