Launched last year, the scheme is critical to Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's plans to reform the country's health system, where
private healthcare is too expensive for most people and public
hospitals are overburdened and often dilapidated.
The "Modicare" program offers families health cover of up to 500,000
rupees ($7,000) a year for serious ailments - a significant amount
by Indian standards - but the scheme has struggled to gain traction.
India has so far registered about 20% of the eligible 500 million
people, due to lack of public awareness of the scheme and low
private sector participation, said Indu Bhushan, CEO of the National
Health Authority (NHA), which runs the program.
"There is a challenge of creating awareness and building the
required infrastructure," Bhushan said in an interview. "We need to
work more on awareness ... give us time."
Under the program, more than 6 million people have so far received
treatment free of charge, he said.
Currently, 60% of the approximately 20,000 hospitals registered
under the program are in the private sector, Bhushan said, adding
that increasing their participation was critical to the scheme's
success.
Private hospitals, however, are concerned about costs. A report by
Indian lobby group FICCI and consultants EY said in August that
private hospitals complained that treatment rates offered by the NHA
covered only 40-80% of their costs.
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Bhushan said his agency was in talks with hospitals, industry groups
and service providers and was open to revising rates, even though he
had last month increased payments offered to hospitals for some
treatments.
"We are hoping that private sector would come. If rates are not
viable, private sector will not come," he said.
The NHA's budget spending also reflects the slow uptake of the
scheme. The health agency will spend only 50-55 billion rupees ($766
million) of the allocated 62 billion rupees in the current fiscal
year that ends in March, said Bhushan.
In order to expand the scheme more swiftly, however, the NHA was
likely to seek at least 80 billion rupees for next year, 30% more
than its current annual budget, a senior government source said.
"In the next one year, the scheme should be quite well-known across
the country," Bhushan said.
(Reporting by Manoj Kumar; Editing by Aditya Kalra and Giles Elgood)
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