Don’t leave healthcare in the hands of private sector
By Soumitra Ghosh (HT 14.9.17)
The National Health Policy 2017 must aim to
provide affordable care to the maximum number of people
In Gorakhpur, more than
75 children have died since August 7 at the Baba Raghav Das Medical College
Hospital. A closer look at the statistics related to the child mortality at the
hospital speaks volumes about the successive governments’ apathy towards health
in UP. The infant mortality rate (IMR) at Gorakhpur is one of the highest in
the world. The Annual Health Survey data records 66 deaths per 1,000 live
births — similar to the numbers in war ravaged Afghanistan. UP’s IMR is one of
the highest in India. In fact, barring a few states, the rest of India is not
very different from UP.
Governments have been
promoting the private sector in health through various policies. India’s
tax-to-GDP ratio increased from 6% in 1950-51 to 17% in 2015-16 but the money
has not been used to enhance the capacity of the public healthcare delivery
system.
As the government had
almost withered away in the health sector, private hospitals have devised ways
of extract money from hapless patients.
Earlier, doctors used to
take decisions in the best interests of the patient. Now, they also serve the
interests of their employers. Most corporate and large private hospitals set
revenue targets for their consultants, which then force them to pass it on to
patients in the form of unnecessary clinical tests and surgical procedures.
Crores of rupees is wasted each year due to over-diagnosis and overtreatment,
even as millions of people still do not have access to medical care.
A leading contributor to
many of the above mentioned issues is commercialisation of medical education,
which has been pushed too far with the massive increase in the number of
private medical colleges. Around 60% of the medical seats are in private
medical colleges and the medical graduates passing out from these colleges pay
“capitation fees” running into crores of rupees to get an MBBS degree. No
wonder that they would be averse to the idea of practising in rural areas as
their primary concern becomes the recovery of the capital they’ve invested in
their education.
India’s new National
Health Policy 2017 has gone a step ahead with its call for strategic purchase
of healthcare from the private sector with public money. It is worth noting
that the key mechanism of strategic purchasing is insurance. The NHP envisages
that purchasing should be separated from provisioning of healthcare,
particularly for hospital care. It seems the architects of the NHP have faith
in the market solutions for efficient allocation of resources, oblivious to the
fact that the market fails because of problems such as information asymmetry
and externalities inherent in the healthcare market. Soumitra Ghosh is
assistant professor at Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai
The views expressed are
personal
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