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Modi government puts brakes on India's universal health plan
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[March 27, 2015]
By Aditya Kalra
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi has asked for a drastic cutback of an ambitious health
care plan after cost estimates came in at $18.5 billion over five years,
several government sources said, delaying a promise made in his election
manifesto.
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Modi has had to make difficult choices to boost economic growth -
his government's first full annual budget, announced last month,
ramped up infrastructure spending, leaving less federal funding
immediately available for social sectors.
The health ministry developed a draft policy on universal health
care in coordination with the prime minister's office last year. The
National Health Assurance Mission aims to provide free drugs,
diagnostic services and insurance for serious ailments for India's
1.2 billion people.
The health ministry proposed rolling out the system from April 2015,
and in October projected its cost as $25.5 billion over four years.
By the time the project was presented to Modi in January the costs
had been pared to 1.16 trillion rupees ($18.5 billion) over five
years.
That was still too much. The program was not approved, three health
ministry officials and two other government sources told Reuters.
Three officials said the health ministry has been asked to revamp
the policy, but work is yet to start.
"The constraint on India's financial resources was conveyed to
health officials, and even to those from other ministries," said one
government official who is not from the health ministry but attended
the meeting where Modi was present.
The meeting was held in January and the discussions were not made
public. All of the sources declined to be named because of the
sensitivity of the discussions.
Officials at the prime minister's office and the finance ministry,
as well as the health ministry, did not respond to requests seeking
comment.
Modi's manifesto ahead of the election that brought him to power
last year accorded "high priority" to the health sector and promised
a universal health assurance plan. The manifesto said previous
public health schemes, that have been mired in payment delays
recently, had failed to meet the growing medical needs of public.
Modi has another four years left in his first term to fulfill the
promise.
India currently spends about 1 percent of its gross domestic product
(GDP) on public health, but the badly-managed public health system
means funds are not fully utilized. A health ministry vision
document in December proposed raising spending to 2.5 percent of GDP
but did not specify a time period.
So health experts were dismayed when the federal budget for the
full-year starting April raised the allocation for the country's
main health department only by about 2 percent from the previous
year, less than inflation. The meager increase dimmed prospects for
the massive health plan, they said.
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"How can it happen when you have truncated resources?" one health
ministry official asked.
REWORK, DISAPPOINTMENT
The health plan was drafted in consultation with Modi's office and
an expert panel, including an expert from the World Bank. The
proposal included insurance to cover more expensive and serious
ailments such as heart surgeries or organ failure.
Two government officials said this benefit will be withdrawn. The
health ministry was also asked why the new plan could not be simply
combined with existing health schemes.
The decision to slash the level of insurance coverage will have an
impact on India's thriving private health sector, which would have
seen huge business growth as the program channeled millions of new
patients into private hospitals.
Currently only 17 percent of India's population has some form of
health insurance.
Anjan Bose of NATHEALTH, a group that represents such private firms,
said the delays in the program would disappoint both the industry
and the public.
"Greater availability of funds for public health care under this
program would have further boosted growth of the private medical
industry," Bose said.
(Additional reporting by Frank Jack Daniel, Editing by Frank Jack
Daniel and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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