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The past decade has been, what can at best be regarded as a mixed bag for Indian healthcare. We have witnessed a rise in the level of institutional deliveries, a full-immunisation coverage nudging 70 percent, and a promising decline in infant mortality rate and total fertility rate.
At the same time, however, we still remain at the rock bottom of public health expenditure, while nations such as Afghanistan, Nepal, and Maldives present much more respectable figures than we do.
As dismaying as these statistics are, equally disconcerting is the fact that a very fundamental question concerning our healthcare philosophy remains unanswered amid all this.
At the time of independence, the sovereign, socialist, democratic republic of India embraced the vision of healthcare being made available to all irrespective of the ability to pay, through a state-controlled system.
However, the other side of things presents a version which is highly dissonant with this line of thought.
Building on an already established private health sector and in line with the stated policy, India has constantly presented a favorable environment for market forces to dominate it's healthcare provision for the last few decades – so much so that over two-thirds of our healthcare today is with the for-profit sector.
This reveals the fickleness of our very philosophy of healthcare provision.
The National Health Policy (NHP) 2017, while explicitly citing a lack of ‘threshold levels of finances and infrastructure’ as being the prime barrier towards realisation of a rights-based approach to healthcare, aspired to ‘create an enabling environment for realising healthcare as a right in the future’.
From the jostle for setting up of new AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences) to proposing to build renal dialysis centres in district hospitals with public-private partnership, lopsided priorities have resulted in costly end-point management taking precedence over the much cheaper entry level interventions, leaving a lot to be desired in terms of health outcomes at the same time.
In view of our perpetual failure to allocate a serious percentage of GDP to healthcare and the fact that many of the targets mentioned in the NHP 1983 (the year it was first adopted) still remain unfulfilled, such assurances, as that of creating an enabling environment for the right to health, appear to be little more than promises written on water.
With Universal Health Coverage (UHC) as it's theme, the World Health Day 2018 makes a propitious occasion for us to ascertain and declare our philosophy of healthcare provision.
Do we sincerely swear allegiance to the concept that health is a fundamental right, or do we believe that healthcare makes a lucrative business enterprise and should be traded for profit?
How to chart the way forward and what indicators and yardsticks to develop to measure progress will depend on the choice we make.
Assuming that we shall restate our commitment to the right to health, the following could be suggested:
(Dr Soham D Bhaduri is a doctor based in Mumbai. He is currently the Editor-in-chief of The Indian Practitioner (a foremost peer reviewed medical journal). He has written articles on healthcare in a number of publications including The Hindu, The Indian Express, The Wire, The British Medical Journal etc. He can be reached at soham.bhaduri@gmail.com)
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Published: 06 Apr 2018,09:40 PM IST