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Health System in India: Bridging the Gap between Current Performance and Potential

Health System in India: Bridging the Gap between Current Performance and Potential
Start Date :
Apr 23, 2015
Last Date :
Jun 09, 2015
12:45 PM IST (GMT +5.30 Hrs)
Submission Closed

This discussion is now closed. To view the summation of content from this discussion visit our Blog. The topic has now been furthered into nine new discussions along the pillars of ...

This discussion is now closed. To view the summation of content from this discussion visit our Blog. The topic has now been furthered into nine new discussions along the pillars of health systems strengthening. You are invited to contribute actively to these discussions.

Health Information Systems
Human Resources for Health
Availability of drugs, vaccines and other consumables
Public Health
Service Delivery in Health
Using Available Financial Resources in Health as a Tool for Efficiency
Stewardship and Governance in Health
Regulation of Drugs, Food and Medical Practice
Increasing Financial Resources for Health

India has made remarkable achievements in areas like Polio elimination, lowering fertility and disease control. However, our progress in health outcomes has been slower in comparison to other countries with comparable incomes and at similar stages of development. Impressive gains in per capita income should match with increase in life expectancy or health status. We now face a triple burden of disease. Out of pocket expenditures in India is high (70 percent of total health expenditure). This is catastrophic for the poor and pushes an estimated 37 million into poverty every year.

Health is a subject allotted to the State List, under the Seventh Schedule of the Indian Constitution. The Central Government is jointly responsible for items in the Concurrent List.We have one of the most expansive publicly provided networks of health facilities yet issues of regional disparity, access and quality remain. The private sector despite being utilized by the majority of the population also has issues of quality and cost.

Even though the Union Budget allocation for the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare in 2015-16 has remained at the level of revised expenditure in 2014-15, an opportunity lies in encouraging States to spend more on the social sector with greater devolution of untied funds following the recommendations of the Fourteenth Finance Commission.

India is brimming with possibilities. Successful conduct of election, Census survey, projects in space and atomic sciences are some examples. India is termed as the “pharmacy of the global south”, providing affordable, life saving generic medicines to developed and developing countries. In the same way, there is potential for our health system to deliver optimal outcomes to the population.

The Twelfth Plan charts the path towards strengthening health systems so as to reach the long term objective of Universal Health Coverage (UHC). It is our belief that a Health System Strengthening approach is the solution to bridging the gap between our current status and potential performance. The Health Division of the NITI Aayog invites you to an open and informed discussion to elicit ideas for overcoming the enormous challenges in the sector with limited funds at hand and guide future action at all levels, in our system. Your opinion is important and valued.

Detailed note on the current status of health system in India

We invite your responses on these two questions:

1. How can we maximize health returns from available resources?
2. How can we increase investments in health?

This discussion is open for the next two weeks after which we will post a summary of the ideas generated on the forum. We will also follow-up with a more detailed note on the issues in health system and learning from best practices in the country as well as globally for further discussion. Informed briefs on the above mentioned questions will also be made available after the initial two weeks for more a targeted dialogue.

Comments made by our Division will appear as “NITIHealth”.

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Showing 585 Submission(s)
krishna poddar
krishna poddar 11 years 2 months ago
I would also suggest 20-25% reservation for the poor at private hospitals. Infact, the government hospitals should take the responsibility of outsourcing this to private hospitals. Also, there should be a cap on all the medical cost and fees, otherwise some of doctors have made this noble profession a money making business.
krishna poddar
krishna poddar 11 years 2 months ago
Health, I believe is directly related to the food and hygiene. I would suggest that the mid day meals (which most of the children from poor families have access to) should be improved. Facilities should be modeled on as provided by Akshaya Patra Foundation and there should be continuous monitoring of the same. Then ratio of doctor to patients should be increased along with better facilities at hospitals.
Bharat Sanyal
Bharat Sanyal 11 years 2 months ago
Perform medical checkups of school children. At the minimum provide eyesight and hearing check. When a child cannot see/hear in class they get distracted easily and disrupt others. Low cost foods (maggi noodles/parle G biscuits etc) need to be fortified with nutrients needed for good health. As regards health system a network of basic and intensive care facilities need to be identified/located based on population density and geographic distance. Where no facilities exist, provide incentives.
Himanshumurari Rai
Himanshumurari Rai 11 years 2 months ago
CONTD.3 No rules for new doctors which can ensure them to serve at least for 2 years in rural areas, etc. Many other things are there which can not be discuss here because for that we need ground level enquiry, workout to understand the performance and method to improve. But Govt. doesn't have time to make a team who can do it sincerely.
Himanshumurari Rai
Himanshumurari Rai 11 years 2 months ago
CONTD.2 - If the BHU, PGI, AIIMS like instritute are doping this then we can understand the condition of small Govt. hospitals in rural areas. Highlighted the same to PMO 8-9 months back but didn't receive any response or action from Govt. As per my view this is not the right time to discuss the potential, we have to work on current performance. Once we improve performance then we will be in condition to think about potential. POOR PERFORMANCE, CARELESSNESS of DOCTORS.....CONTD.3
Himanshumurari Rai
Himanshumurari Rai 11 years 2 months ago
Current performance of Indian Health system 1. All big medical institutes has short of doctors. 2. Existing doctors are calling patients in their pvt. clinic 3. And then asking for costly tests from their recommended pathology. 4. Campus Medical shops are not keeping most consumable medicine and the needy taking same from outside on high rates. 5. Emergency ward is worst then train general bogie. 6. Inexperienced doctors are there with no care for patients. CONTD. in 2
JAGDISH PATHAK
JAGDISH PATHAK 11 years 2 months ago
Self help group should be activated at grass route level under health centre of aanganwadi, for the health of child for awaness and health concious.public support for sukhadi, shira and other healthy food, while the medicines of vitamines etc. should be provided by government.The work should be done like mission to serve nation for making nation healthy by making people healthy, child healthy.
bHARAT
bHARAT 11 years 2 months ago
How the eHealth record system puts you at the centre of our healthcare The eHealth record system hasto be designed so that one can choose how our health information is handled. Once weu have registered online than we will be able to decide whether all or just some of the healthcare providers involved in our care can access our eHealth record or specific documents within it.
Vijay Ganbote
Vijay Ganbote 11 years 2 months ago
To bridge the gap between demand and supply in health,the practioners of all other pathies than allopathy must be included in govt.services.Give them necessary training and use their expertise.Relying only on allopathy doctors will not help achieve goals.
priynk sharma
priynk sharma 11 years 2 months ago
The govt should do land pooling, cooperative farming, so that the farmers can produce by taking less amount of loans, middleman should be rejected right now as they only have exploited them giving them loans at 20-25%. they also put fear in the mind of farmers so that they don't leave them sometimes emotionally exploiting them. The panchayat should play a pro-active role in this with utilizing funds to create agriculuture infra like cold storage,irrigation,warehouse,mechanising the process.