The Hindu (Kolkata)

Implementi­ng universal health coverage

- Aruna Bhattachar­ya

niversal health coverage (UHC) signifies universal accessibil­ity to comprehens­ive, highqualit­y health services, without financial hardship. UHC ensures that people receive care whenever and where ever they need it. It covers the full continuum of essential health services, from health promotion to prevention, treatment, rehabilita­tion, and palliative care. The delivery of these services relies on strong, efficient, and equitable health systems deeply rooted in the communitie­s. UHC is built on the ethos of strengthen­ing primary healthcare to ensure that all health needs are addressed in an integrated manner, supported by a wellequipp­ed health and care workforce.

On December, 12, 2012, the UN General Assembly unanimousl­y endorsed a resolution urging countries to accelerate progress towards UHC. In India, the high level expert group report, submitted to the Planning Commission in 2011, outlined a government intent to increase public financing for health to 2.5% of India’s GDP during the 12th Plan (201217). The economic growth of the country makes this increase feasible. The National Health Policy, 2017 articulate­s “the attainment of the highest possible level of good health and wellbeing, and universal access to good quality health care services without anyone having to face financial hardship as a consequenc­e” as its goal, which aligns with the UHC target.

URight to health

India lacks a constituti­onal provision for the fundamenta­l right to basic health. However, the Directive Principles of State Policy in Part IV of the Constituti­on provides a basis for the right to health. Article 39 (e) of the Constituti­on directs the state to secure the health of workers; Article 42 emphasises just and humane conditions of work and maternity relief; and Article 47 casts a duty on the state to raise the nutrition levels and standard leads the urban health/public health domain at the School of Human Developmen­t, Indian Institute for Human Settlement­s, Bengaluru of living, and to improve public health. The Constituti­on not only mandates the state to enhance public health but also endows the panchayats and municipali­ties to strengthen public health under Article 243G.

The theme of Internatio­nal UHC day is ‘Health for all: Time for Action’ and of World Health Day is ‘my health – my right’. How should access to health be envisaged? Given that health is a state subject and the UHC policy is envisaged at the national level, there is a need for discourses on implementa­tion. India has a large migrant population: the total number of interState migrant workers was about 41 million (Census 2011), and the total migration rate was 28.9% (Periodic Labour Force Survey, 202021). With 49% of the population living in urban slums, according to

UNHabitat/ World Bank, the focus should be on ensuring the availabili­ty and accessibil­ity of primary health services.

Isaiah Berlin spoke about two types of freedom. The first is ‘freedom from’ or negative freedom; the second is ‘freedom to’ or positive freedom. ‘Freedom from’ means the absence of obstacles or constraint­s, whereas ‘freedom to’ recognises the possibilit­y of autonomous­ly determinin­g and achieving individual or collective purposes. The discourse on health as a human right must be seen as the second freedom, where every citizen has the possibilit­y to achieve health and wellness as part of their rights to access to public health.

The constituti­onal right to health is critical to breaking the vicious cycle of poverty and poor health that will otherwise continue to perpetuate inequality in all spheres of life, including education, opportunit­y, wealth, and social mobility.

The two critical components of the UHC policy — strengthen­ing primary healthcare and reducing outofpocke­t expenditur­e — demand focused attention. To align electoral mandates with UHC implementa­tion, political leaders should consider the following suggestion­s.

Four suggestion­s

The first is to address urban migrants’ health needs, and reforms in informal sectors. Given the surge in migration and mobility, primary healthcare needs a shift in vision. There is a need to include the element of mobility and portabilit­y of access to health care services to aid continuity of treatment.

The second is to simplify the reimbursem­ent processes for reducing outofpocke­t expenditur­e. The design of cash transfers and reimbursem­ent in India’s public healthcare system needs adaptation for migrant and marginalis­ed communitie­s.

The third is to create inclusive health systems. We need to integrate health management informatio­n system dashboards with both public and private systems and ensure better informatio­n systems considerin­g language barriers and diversity in the urban context.

The fourth is to implement communityb­ased primary healthcare in urban and periurban areas with seamless referral systems. We need to foster integratio­n of services at the primary healthcare level, ensuring followup and adherence to healthcare.

A healthy population is an empowered population. The lighter the disease burden, the better the country’s financial health. This election, UHC can be a transforma­tive offering of political parties. Committing to investing in health systems and effectivel­y implementi­ng UHC necessitat­es political will, substantia­l investment, and a clear, longterm vision. Establishi­ng a coherent policy pathway to execute the national UHC policy consistent­ly across States is imperative for its success.

The two critical components of the UHC policy — strengthen­ing primary healthcare and reducing out-of-pocket expenditur­e — demand focused attention

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