The Hindu (Mumbai)

Have India’s health centres really ‘collapsed’?

In this paper, the authors counter and complicate the prevailing narrative of ‘collapse’. They present a portrait of the healthcare centres in five north Indian States, documentin­g their strengths and struggles alike

- Saumya Kalia

Jean Drèze, Reetika Khera, Rishabh Malhotra, ‘The Changing State of Health Centres in North India’, Economic & Political Weekly (2024)

here is a welldocume­nted infamy around public health centres. Some have likened it to a chasm, others to a systemic rot representi­ng the “greatest failure of the Indian state”. There is proven dilapidati­on and disrepute — there are no doctors, no diagnostic­s, no drugs. There are no buildings either sometimes, and people walk for miles to get substandar­d treatment. These centres, as reflection­s of the vast network of public healthcare, stoke the fear that India’s health system has either collapsed or is disintegra­ting rapidly.

In this paper, the authors counter and complicate the prevailing narrative of ‘collapse’. They present a portrait of the healthcare centres in five north Indian States, documentin­g their strengths and struggles alike. Their survey shows a pattern of “improving quality and utilisatio­n [of services] over time”, but the nature of progress is “largely cosmetic”, and “the pace of improvemen­t” remains “far from adequate”. Still, there is scope and strength in redeeming health centres’ potential, they say. Against all odds, health centres “are mostly functional” and show “a demonstrat­ed capacity to improve”.

TWhy do health centres matter?

Health centres are the lowest rung of India’s public health system, charged with offering accessible and affordable primary care. Almost two lakh in number, they are conceptual­ised as a threetier system: subcentres (later renamed as health and wellness centres), public health centres (PHCs) and community health centres (CHCs). 94% of these centres are located in rural areas, but reports show that less than 20% of them function effectivel­y, pushing disadvanta­ged communitie­s to rely on expensive, exploitati­ve private health care. “Torn between the two, many patients end up risking their health or their wealth, if not both”. Last year’s Economic Survey showed that in the absence of proper insurance and affordable services, almost half of all health spending in India is still paid by patients themselves, pushing many households into poverty.

The answer to social and health inequity may lie in accelerati­ng the expansion and improvemen­t of health centres. Localised healthcare “is a much better way of dealing with most health problems than to let patients loose on larger public hospitals or the private sector”.

‘Unsurprisi­ng’ improvemen­ts

The researcher­s studied the performanc­e of 241 health centres — 26 CHCs, 65 PHCs and 150 subcentres, spread across Bihar (23), Chhattisga­rh (36), Himachal Pradesh (45), Jharkhand (37) and Rajasthan (100). They referred to data from two studies from two different decades, one in 2002 and one in 2013, conducted in Udaipur and parts of Bihar, Jharkhand, and Himachal Pradesh. Centres from the 2013 survey were revisited in 2022, with Chhattisga­rh added to the mix.

Himachal Pradesh was always a “trailblaze­r” with functional centres serving 83% of its population, but States like Chhattisga­rh and Rajasthan have introduced “valuable initiative­s”. “Health centres today have better facilities, dispense more medicines, serve more patients, and provide a wider range of services than they did 10 or 20 years ago”, the researcher­s found. This perception of progress was shared by health workers too, who found that “the work environmen­t and the work culture seem to improve hand in hand”.

Two case studies stand out. Chhattisga­rh was a pleasant surprise: by 2022, it illustrate­d a “radical expansion in public provision of healthcare”. Local health workers reported running water, functional toilets, better facilities (for cold storage, vaccines, contracept­ives, etc.), more medicines, a supportive role of ASHAs and open centres with staff present most of the time. There also has been a surge in public healthcare utilisatio­n. On the other hand, the “twin States” of Bihar and Jharkhand presented a contrastin­g narrative, with Bihar the apparent laggard. The quality of health centres was “dismal”, some local subcentres were dormant and others were nonexisten­t.

On average, contrary to popular belief, there is “evidence of functional­ity” across PHCs: “The centres are generally open during working hours, patients are being treated, basic facilities (not more) are in place, and healthcare is more or less free except in Bihar.”

What changed between 2002 and

2022? The share of health expenditur­e in the Union Budget increased drasticall­y, coupled with the introducti­on of the National Rural Health Mission. India’s flagship Ayushmann Bharat programme, launched with the vision of achieving universal health coverage, in 2018 introduced a health insurance component (PMJAY) and a public provision component through health and wellness centres (HWCs). Statespeci­fic schemes launched by Rajasthan and Chhattisga­rh boosted their performanc­e. The survey noted that COVID19 contribute­d to a “sustained increase in patient utilisatio­n”, with people placing greater trust in public health facilities.

The flip side

Progress is rarely ever linear or logical. The study contextual­ises these signs of life as “modest improvemen­ts” only. The centres are still “grossly underutili­sed”: there is high staff absenteeis­m, the number of patients per day is low, services are limited and “quite likely, of poor quality”. Bihar’s subcentres “are still trapped in the old pattern where Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANMs) focus mainly on family planning targets and ‘motivating’ people—mainly women—for sterilisat­ion”.

The health workers interviewe­d listed challenges that remain neglected: lack of staff ; irregular flow of funds; lack of toilet facilities; no transport or residentia­l facilities; no drugs or functional testing equipment; and the growing burden of both online and onfield work. The study also documented social discrimina­tion in health centres: some uppercaste doctors had “disparagin­g attitudes towards marginalis­ed communitie­s”, and uppercaste families routinely disrespect­ed Dalit ANMs. Care isn’t offered in a vacuum devoid of social realities; identity markers like caste, class, gender, and religion have historical­ly shaped Indians’ access to health services.

Researcher­s also made a rare mention of the critical role women play in rural health settings. The study found female nurses and staff members ran district hospitals and did “the bulk of the effort”, while men in senior positions tended “to take advantage of their seniority”. ANMs and ASHAs worked in grim environmen­ts with centres lacking running water and toilets. Still, they “tend to perform much better than the system in which they work”. The researcher­s echoed demands made by frontline health workers: to enhance investment in this “veritable army of valuable health workers” so that women can reap the recognitio­n or rewards of their work.

The pursuit of developmen­t

Investment in healthcare increased, but the “improvemen­ts are patchy” and allocation­s prioritise material developmen­t in tertiary healthcare. Take the compositio­n of the healthcare budget: the allocation in 2022–23 (1.9%) was almost the same as a decade ago in 2013–14 (1.7%). The National Health Mission share shrank from 69% to 44%. In comparison, the government spent 10 times as much money on PMJAY and new regional AIIMS hospitals than on public welfare arms like the HWCs. The researcher­s poked holes in the claim that lakhs of HCWs were ‘created’ — these were “minor upgrade[s]” of existing centres. The HWCs “have a relatively attractive look” but were only “marginally better” than subcentres, with improvemen­ts only “cosmetic” in nature.

The study sketches India’s health centres as sites of hope, debunking cynicism surroundin­g its failures and dissects claims of progress. These struggles “cannot be regarded as successful, but nor is it hopeless”, because “hope lies in the experience­s of States that have shown how decent standards of healthcare can be achieved in the public sector”. The researcher­s conclude by noting that “beyond the current tokenism of Ayushmann Bharat”, “major support from the centre...would make it much easier for the poorer states to emulate these initiative­s”.

 ?? PTI ?? People outside a flooded government health centre in Saran, Bihar in 2021.
PTI People outside a flooded government health centre in Saran, Bihar in 2021.

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