IMPROVING HEALTHCARE SYSTEM IN INDIA
India spends
Rs 1,112 per capita on public health per year, less than the cost of a single
consultation at one of the country's finest private hospitals–roughly the price
of a pizza at many restaurants. This works out to be Rs 93 per month, or Rs 3
each day. According to the National Source: National Health Profile, 2018
Health Profile, 2018, released by union minister for health and family welfare,
JP Nadda, on June 19, 2018, India's public health expenditure is among the
lowest in the world, spending 1.02 percent of its GDP on healthcare, a figure
that has remained nearly unchanged in the nine years since 2009. It is lower
than most low-income countries, which spend 1.4 percent of their GDP on
healthcare.
Patients in
India seek healthcare from the private sector for a variety of reasons, one of
which is the country's poor public-health spending. According to India Spend,
Indians are the sixth largest out-of-pocket (OOP) health spenders among the 50
countries in the low-middle income bracket. According to several assessments,
these prices push roughly 32-39 million Indians into poverty each year. Let’s
take a look at some of the most common issues in our existing health-care
system:
1.Health-care
facility distribution is skewed, While India is a popular destination for
medical tourism, which means that some of our hospitals can provide world-class
care at a lower cost, we also have hospitals that are understaffed, lack
adequate facilities, lack medicines, and may not even be able to provide a bed
or an ambulance.
2. Lack of manpower: There is a scarcity
of trained and skilled doctors, nurses, technicians, and other medical
personnel. In 2015, India experienced a shortage of 2 million doctors and 4
million nurses. Many talented nurses are known to relocate to other countries
in search of better wages.
3. Inadequate infrastructure: Public
health facilities account for 20% of India's primary healthcare system. The private
sector is responsible for the majority of secondary and tertiary care facilities.
As a result, if the government spends more money on public healthcare than it
does now, it will be able to do the following:
1. Higher
wages would encourage skilled doctors and workers to remain in India.
2. Medical
professionals and doctors will be able to work in smaller towns and villages
due to higher earnings and improved living conditions.
3. Increased
funding will allow public hospitals to obtain medicines and supplies, receive
uninterrupted water and energy, maintain the facility and keep it clean and
safe, and maintain equipment and ambulances so that they are functioning and
available when needed.
4. Increased
funding for medical and nursing colleges, as well as technical training
institutes, would allow for more seats to be added to existing colleges or the
establishment of new colleges in new locations.
There are
other alternative options for improving healthcare, such as: Promoting domestic
innovation and production (of medical products), Investing more in medical
research, upskilling existing workers and improving medical, nursing, and
technical education, Collaborations with other countries. However, before we
can do this, the government must first raise healthcare funds and repair
fundamental infrastructure.
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