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India’s G20 presidency: An agenda for Primary Health Care
Key Takeaway
- It has been one of the priority areas for G20 deliberations since 2017 when the German presidency organised the first meeting of health ministers of G20 countries.
- The G20 now has a financial stream for health finance and a Sherpa stream for health system development.
- The importance of the subject is reflected in an annual G20 meeting of health ministers and a joint health and finance task force.
- Health systems strengthening has engaged the global community in thinking through the content and directions.
- A PHC-with-UHC approach entails strengthening primary-level care through whole-of-society and whole-of-government approaches and extending the “PHC principles” to secondary and tertiary care services.
Engagement of the global community to strengthen primary healthcare systems
- Universal Health Coverage (UHC)
- By universalizing health insurance coverage, the concept of UHC was born in the 2000s to prevent catastrophic medical expenditures due to secondary and tertiary-level hospital services.
- UHC is a strategy to ensure healthcare for all
- Since 2010, the UHC has been the major global approach for strengthening health systems.
- It was also adopted in 2015 as the strategy for SDG-3 to ensure healthcare for all ages.
- Limited impact of UHC
- However, the limited impact of this narrow strategy became clear quickly, with spending on outdoor services becoming disastrous for low-income households.
- In addition, many unnecessary medical interventions were carried out, preventing access to necessary healthcare and medicines.
Healthcare Status in India
- Firstly, India has a dual burden of communicable and non-communicable diseases, and many of these diseases are preventable through early detection, health education, timely referral, and management.
- Nearly 8 lakh cancer cases are detected yearly, with 60-80% of cases being diagnosed late.
- The major underlying causes of many diseases are a lack of awareness and poor health-seeking behaviour.
- Inadequate healthcare quality, accessibility, and affordability.
- Additionally, out-of-pocket expenses are high.
- Infrastructure, equipment, and skilled labour are in short supply.
- Many villages lack primary health care centres, and those with them lack basic amenities.
- Almost 70% of healthcare is delivered by private players who are heavily regulated.
- Sanitation, disease surveillance, political will, and public health response are all lacking.
- Furthermore, the government only spends 1.5% of the GDP on public health care.
Initiatives that can implement
- Making health a priority in all aspects of development
- Health in all policies, one health, planetary health, and pandemic preparedness are all examples of one health.
- Strengthening health systems
- Creating PHC-with-UHC models for a variety of contexts.
- Conceptualised as a care continuum ranging from home self-care to community services and primary-level para-medical services.
- In addition, first contact with a doctor, with services provided as close to the home as possible, at an affordable and easily deliverable price.
- Appropriate technologies that should become the norm
- Rationally strengthening health technology assessment, healthcare ethics, equitable access to pharmaceutical products and vaccines, and integrative health systems using plural knowledge systems.
- Health and medical care as seen by the marginalised
- Health care needs for women, care for indigenous peoples worldwide, workplace wellness, mental health and wellbeing, and healthy ageing.
Conclusion
- It is necessary to create PHC-with-UHC (a PHC 2.0) with wide international support and a dedication to a more enduring and humane healthcare system.
- Such an agenda would require extensive international, regional, and national dialogue.
- To commit to a universal, cheap, inclusive, and just healthcare system, India should use its presidency to design a model policy focusing on primary healthcare.
Pic Courtesy: freepik
Content Source: Indian Source