People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 33 August 19, 2012 |
Health Care Mortgaged to
Corporate Sector
Amit Sengupta
A FEW
months back the
Planning Commission of India had put its foot squarely in its
mouth by claiming
that the poverty line in
PLANNING
COMMISSION:
TRAIL
OF BROKEN PROMISES
It may be argued that the Twelfth Five Year
Plan document is of little
consequence, as seldom do plan documents translate into any
actual action by
the government. One has only to look at past plan documents to
understand this.
The Eleventh Plan document, for example, had said: “In the last two years of the Plan, total Plan
expenditure will need to
rise at about 48 per cent annually. This will result in a
total health
expenditure of 0.87 per cent of GDP by the centre and 1.13
per cent by States
in 2011---12.” Nothing but empty promises; the total
public expenditure on
health has stagnated at around 1.1 per cent of GDP (0.32 per
cent by the centre
and 0.7 per cent by states). It is significant to note that
the major source of
shortfall has been the meagre allocation by the central
government --- just 37
per cent of what had been promised in the Eleventh Five Year
Plan.
The plan document had also projected that
all sub-centres (about
1,75,000) and primary health centres (PHCs --- about 30,000)
would be
functional by 2010, and all Community Health Centres (CHCs ---
about 6,500)
would be functional by 2012. Yet statistics for 2011 show a
shortfall in the
targets set of 17 per cent, 18 per cent and 34 per cent
respectively, for
sub-centres, PHCs and CHCs. It was also projected that Infant
Mortality Rate
(number of infant deaths per 1,000 live births) would come
down to 28 by 2012.
The infant mortality rate in 2011 stood at 48! One can
continue enumerating the
huge differences between targets set by the plan document and
actual realisation,
but suffice it to say that there is almost no correspondence
between promise
and delivery on the ground.
The consequences of poor commitment to
public health are clearly visible.
Two decades after neo-liberal reforms
were initiated,
Under 5 Mortality Rates in
Country |
Under Five Mortality Rate (Child who die before the age of
5/1,000 live births) |
||||
|
1990 |
1995 |
2000 |
2005 |
2010 |
|
115 |
100 |
86 |
73 |
63 |
|
124 |
115 |
101 |
94 |
87 |
|
32 |
27 |
23 |
19 |
17 |
|
143 |
114 |
86 |
64 |
48 |
|
141 |
110 |
84 |
65 |
50 |
Source: World
Bank Database
(http://data.worldbank.org/)
It then raises the legitimate question ---
why should one be concerned
about the contents of the Twelfth Five Year Plan document? The
reason for grave
concern is ideological --- for the prescriptions in the new
plan document are
ideologically motivated. For the first time, a
public document to be
released by the government of
HEALTH
SECTOR REFORMS
IN
NEO-LIBERAL FRAMEWORK
Health sector reforms that are located in
the neo-liberal framework
follow a familiar pattern today --- be it
But this did not mean that the neo-liberal
agenda was abandoned --- it
was brought back in a different avatar. It was acknowledged
that government
expenditure must increase. It was also acknowledged that
something had to be
done fast, if large populations were to be rescued from the
distress caused by
a collapse of the public health system. Capital never gives up
on its attempts
to find a way to maximise returns. So the solution that was
found was not
located in a restoration of public health services. Instead,
by a sleight of
hand, a new opportunity emerged for capital. Government
(public) expenditure
must be increased, but this expansion will not be used to
develop and
strengthen public facilities. Instead, public money will now
be pumped into the
organised private sector, to whom will be handed over the
responsibility of
providing health care. Governments will finance but not
provide care, they will
become ‘managers’ of care. This is the managed care model of
care that is now
being promoted by neo-liberal theorists.
REFORMS
IN
The roll out of such a plan in
The public health system stands at a
critical juncture. For all its
deficiencies, the NHRM has resulted in some expansion and
strengthening of the
public health care system. The logical step forward would have
been to invest
in further expansion and strengthening of this system. But for
the present government,
the neo-liberal logic was too difficult to resist. The first
challenge that was
mounted against the public system came in the form of the
Rajiv Gandhi Swasthya
Bima Yojana (RSBY) and similar insurance schemes in many
states. Almost
entirely publicly funded, these schemes provided an insurance
cover for Rs 30,000
for BPL families. The catch was that institutions accredited
as part of these
schemes were largely private hospitals. So instead of using
this substantial
public investment to strengthen the public system and create
long term national
assets, public money was pumped into the private sector.
Horror stories have
now started emerging about how private hospitals have bled the
RSBY and similar
schemes to make money and to make a mockery of public health.
In Chhattisgarh the
state health department has initiated action against 22
nursing homes against
which it found prima facie evidence of surgeries being done
without legitimate
medical reasons. It is estimated that over the last eight
months, hospitals and
nursing homes have claimed Rs two crore under RSBY scheme for
removing the
wombs of 1,800 women (Hindustan
Times, August
14, 2012). Many such stories are just waiting to be uncovered
in different
parts of the country.
However, in spite of such challenges, the
NRHM and the public health
system still survives and continues to be an eyesore for the
votaries of
private enterprise. Lest we miss the point, the private
medical sector in
GROSSLY INADEQUATE
ALLOCATION FOR HEALTH
Let us
now turn to some of
the specific proposals in the Planning Commission’s draft (these points have been highlighted in a press
statement by the Jan
Swasthya Abhiyan on August 8). It may be recalled that
in the led up to the
formulation of the report the Planning Commission had set up a
“High Level
Expert Group” to give its recommendations on how the present
system could be
reformed. The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare had also
constituted
different expert groups to provide inputs. Over the last year
several reports
from these committees had indicated various proposals which
were essentially
designed to strengthen the public health system. There has
been uniform
speculation, based on various pronouncements by the
government, that public
expenditure would be significantly enhanced in the Twelfth
Five Year Plan
period.
Yet, the Plan document now recommends
increase in public expenditure on
health from the present 1.02 per cent to 1.58 per cent of GDP.
This is even less
than the modest projections made in the Eleventh Five Year
Plan, which had
proposed that two per cent of GDP be spent on health. The
target is not only
lower than previous commitments made by the government, but
much lower than a
minimum of five per cent of GDP that is recommended by
agencies such as the
World Health Organisation. The gross inadequacy of the
increase proposed has to
be seen in the context that
Percent
Public Health Expenditure
Country/Region |
Public Expenditure on Health as Percent
of Total Health Expenditure |
|
29.20 |
Average of High Income Countries |
65.10 |
Average of Low Income Countries |
38.78 |
Average of Middle Income Countries |
52.04 |
World |
62.76 |
Source:
World Bank Database
(http://data.worldbank.org/)
GOVERNMENT
TO
ABANDON
ROLE OF
HEALTH
CARE PROVIDER
What is of even greater concern is the
strategy proposed for
restructuring of the health system. The plan document proposes
a transition
from: “…..the
present system which is a mixture of public sector service
provision plus
insurance, to a system of health care delivered by a managed
network.” A
clear road map for the government
to abandon its central role of providing health care and
remain a mere ‘manager’
of health services.
The
document’s vision of ‘universal
provision of public health care’ includes two components. “…..preventive interventions
which the
government would be both funding and universally providing,”
and “clinical
services at different levels, defined in an Essential Health
Package, which the
government would finance but not necessarily directly
provide.” Thus the
government would confine itself to providing a small package
of services while
virtually all clinical services would be opened up for the
corporate private
sector. The government would play the role of a
‘purchaser’ of care, and will
thus finance (with public money), strengthen and bolster
an already resurgent
corporate sector --- a diabolical
ploy to hand over the profit-making clinical services sector
to corporate hospital
chains, and progressively wind up the public health system.
The public
health system will now be
asked to compete with the private sector to attract patients.
A system is
envisaged where: “each
citizen family
would be entitled to an Essential Health package in the
network of their
choice. Besides public facility networks organised..… private and NGO providers would also be empanelled
to give a choice
to the families.” Even this truncated role of the public
system is qualified
by the proviso that “…..public
facilities
will have to be strengthened, networked, and their managers
provided sufficient
autonomy to purchase goods and services to fill gaps as per
need.” In other
words, public only in name, but incorporating larger and
larger components
outsourced to the private sector.
Further, the
document repeatedly talks about
expansion of the RSBY scheme and its vision of universal
healthcare is nothing
but a more expanded version of the RSBY scheme. Even the
Planning Commission’s
own expert group had recommended against the continuance of
these insurance
schemes.
IDEOLOGICAL BIAS OF
PLANNING COMMISSION
The
document announces another bonanza
to the corporate medical sector in the form of grants to set
up hospitals and
private medical colleges. It says: “Health
has now been included with other infrastructure sectors
which are eligible for
Viability Gap Funding up to a ceiling of 20 per cent of
total project costs
under a PPP scheme. As a result, private sector would be
able to propose and
commission projects in the health sector, such as hospitals
and medical
colleges outside metropolitan areas, which are not
remunerative per-se, and
claim up to 20 per cent of the project cost as grant from
the Government.”
It may be noted that the only eligibility requirement is the
location, and not
any contribution to public health goals.
Also of
concern are recommendations that
public health facilities will have “flexibility” to raise
their own finances.
The Plan document says: “Tertiary
care facilities
would have an incentive to generate revenues if they are
provided an autonomous
governance structure, which allows them flexibility in the
utilization of
self-generated resources within broad policy parameters laid
down by the
Government”. There are several ways in which such
flexibilities can be
misused, including in the form of levying of user charges
and arrangements with
private entities that seek to extract benefits that
conflict with the public
health goals of public institutions.
The ideological bias of the Planning
Commission’s report is clear when it
says: “A
pure public sector delivery system involves funding a large
public sector
health system, with little incentive for the service
providers to deliver a
quality product.”
Such
an assertion flies in the face of global evidence that the
best performing
health systems are those that are publicly financed and
where health care is
provided by the public sector. Neighbouring
As we have
noted earlier, the Planning
Commission’s draft chapter on health for the Twelfth Five Year
Plan is a clear
ideological assault on the very notion of public health. The
dangerous
formulation in the Planning Commission’s draft must not be
allowed to go
through. It is understood that the Ministry of Health has
expressed serious
reservations regarding the Planning Commission’s document. How
these differing
positions within the government play out will also indicate
whether policy is
formulated by the parliament and executed by ministries, or
whether the
Planning Commission enjoys powers to veto the will of the
people.