The document discusses Ayushman Bharat, the Indian government's new national health protection mission. It aims to provide universal health coverage through two components: 1) Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY), which provides health insurance coverage of Rs. 500,000 per family per year for secondary and tertiary care at public and private hospitals across India. It will subsume existing insurance schemes. 2) Creation of 150,000 Health and Wellness Centers by 2022 to provide comprehensive primary healthcare services within 30 minutes of walking distance. The program aims to expand access to affordable healthcare for India's poor and vulnerable populations as part of the country's shift toward universal health coverage.
2. CONTENTS
1. Background
2. Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana
3. Ayushman Bharat Program
4. Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana
5. Comprehensive Healthcare: Health and Wellness Centres
6. Expected Outcome
7. SWOT Analysis
8. Summary
2
3. BACKGROUND
a) 3/4th of total public sector health services delivered by 1/4th of public health facilities1
b) 70% of all OPD & hospitalization: Private sector2
c) At a cost beyond their capacity to pay: 4% of all poverty2
d) Ranked at 154 of 195 countries on health service delivery index: Lancet, 2017
e) 156,231 SC - 25,650 PHC - 5,624 CHCs: Only 15% meet IPHS3
3
4. RASHTRIYA SWASTHYA BIMA YOJANA (RSBY)
a) Cashless health insurance scheme
b) 2008 - Ministry of Labour and Employment
c) Hospitalization expenses coverage of Rs. 30,000/- per annum
d) Transportation coverage: Rs. 1,000/- with Rs. 100/- per visit
e) 5 members - Below Poverty Line (BPL) or 11 other defined designated categories - districts
f) Rs. 30/- every year & enrolment based
g) Sharing pattern: Central Government & State Government - 75%: 25%
h) 2015 - Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
4
5. SENIOR CITIZEN HEALTH INSURANCE SCHEME (SCHIS)
1. Launched on 01.04.2016 - top up scheme of RSBY
2. Age > 60 years
3. BPL and 11 other defined designated categories
4. Rs. 30,000/–per annum per senior citizen - over and above RSBY entitlement
5. Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment
6. 8 States: Assam, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Tripura and Uttar
Pradesh
6
6. SHORTCOMINGS
1. Low awareness:
2017: 3.63 crore families covered (enrolment of 61%) – 23 states
2. Hospitalization cost: increased >10% between 2004 - 2014, benefits unchanged
3. Target beneficiary: 6 crore families
4. Denial of services: > 1 year to distribute cards
5. 23% increase in OPD costs in the RSBY households
7
7. EXPENDITURE DISTRIBUTION
1. Public health expenditure: 2016-17: 1.15% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
2. Of the Government Health Expenditure, Union Government share is 37% and
State Government share is 63%.
3. Government expenditure on Primary Care is 51.3%, Secondary Care is 21.9%
and Tertiary Care is 14 %
4. Private expenditure on Primary Care is 43.1%, Secondary Care is 39.9% and
Tertiary Care is 16.1%.
8
10. BENEFITS
1. Benefit cover of Rs. 5 lakh per
family per year
2. More than 10 crore families
(nearly 40% of the population)
belonging to poor and vulnerable
population
3. No cap on family size and age
4. Secondary and Tertiary care
procedures
5. Pre-existing conditions
6. Transport allowance
7. Public/private/ESI hospitals across
the country
8. Technologically driven cashless,
paper less transaction
9. Subsume the on-going centrally
sponsored schemes – RSBY &
SCHIS
12
12. AUTOMATICALLY INCLUDED
Based on fulfilling any of the 5 parameters of inclusion
1. Households without shelter
2. Destitute, living on alms
3. Manual scavenger families
4. Primitive tribal groups
5. Legally released bonded labour
*Additionally, families with an active RSBY cards as of 28 February 2018
14
13. MARKERS OF DEPRIVATION
1. Households with one or less room, kuccha walls and kuccha roof
2. No adult member in household between age 18 and 59 years
3. Household headed by female and no working age male member
4. Household with differently able members and no able bodied adult
5. Household with no literate over 25 years
6. Landless households deriving a major part of their income from manual
labour
7. SC/ST households.
15
15. CORE PRINCIPLES
1. Entitlement based enrolment
2. Risk and resource pooling are almost non-existent - fully subsidised
3. Co-operative federalism and flexibility to states
4. Mode of implementation
5. Institutional structure
6. Comprehensive media and IT platform
18
16. CORE PRINCIPLES
1. Entitlement based enrolment
2. Risk and resource pooling are almost non-existent - fully subsidised
3. Co-operative federalism and flexibility to states
4. Mode of implementation
5. Institutional structure
6. Comprehensive media and IT platform
19
17. TRUST/ SOCIETY MODEL
1. Not-for-profit orientation
2. Awareness and sensitisation: government
administrative machinery
3. Weak in-house capacity
4. Weak governance structure
1. Experience
2. In-house capacity & structure
3. Scale up of scheme
4. Cost-escalation overtime
INSURANCE MODEL
20
MODE OF IMPLEMENTATION
18. CORE PRINCIPLES
1. Entitlement based enrolment
2. Risk and resource pooling are almost non-existent - fully subsidised
3. Co-operative federalism and flexibility to states
4. Mode of implementation
5. Institutional structure
6. Comprehensive media and IT platform
21
19. INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE
National Health
Protection Mission
(NHPM) Council
• Policy guidance
• MoHFW & NITI
Aayog
• Health ministers of
all States
ABNHPM Governing
Board
• Decision-making
• MoHFW & NITI
Aayog
• Financial Advisor
(MoHFW), Mission
Director and Joint
Secretary
ABNHPM
ABNHPM Agency
• CEO-Secretary/
Additional
Secretary to GoI
• Operational level in
the form of a
Society
State Health Agency
• State: insurance
company or
through a trust
22
20. CORE PRINCIPLES
1. Entitlement based enrolment
2. Risk and resource pooling are almost non-existent - fully subsidised
3. Co-operative federalism and flexibility to states
4. Mode of implementation
5. Institutional structure
6. Comprehensive media and IT platform
23
24. OUTCOME
1. Standardised treatment guidelines (STGs)
2. Standardised package rates
3. Updating ROHINI (Registry of Hospitals in Network of Insurance)
4. Enrichment of National Health Resource Repository (NHRR)
5. IT integration and data generation
6. Employment generation
27
25. ANALYSIS OF PMJAY
1. Health sector budget allocated: only 2.4% higher over the last year
2. Rs 2,000 crore compared to RSBY Rs 1,000 crore last year
3. NITI Aayog annual estimate: Rs 10,000 crores
4. Check the movement of patients from rural areas & OOPE
5. Moral hazards
6. All the different states agree: ‘game changer’
7. Social determinants of health
28
26. HEALTH AND WELLNESS CENTRES (HWCs)
a. Subcentres: 1/5th without regular water supply – 1/4th without electricity – 1 in 10 without
all weather road, and over 6,000 without single ANM1
b. Creation of 150,000 health and wellness centres – by December 2022
c. “Assuring availability of free, comprehensive primary health care services” by community
within 30 min of walking distance
d. Upgrading all 4,000 primary health centres in urban area to the HWCs by March 2020
e. 11,000 and 16,000 HWCs are proposed to be made functional in financial years 2018-19
and 2019-20
30
27. ORGANIZATION OF HWCs
Primary care provider team:
1. Mid-Level Healthcare Provider (MLHP): Community Health Officer (CHO)
BSc/-General Nurse Midwifery or B.Sc. Community Health or AYUSH doctor
trained in 6 months Certificate Programme in Community Health
2. Multi-Purpose Worker (MPW) Female- 2
3. Multi-Purpose Worker (MPW) Male – 1
4. 5 Accredited Social Health Activist (ASHA)s as outreach team
31
28. ORGANIZATION OF HWCs
1. Central Diagnostic Unit (CDU): every 20 HWCs
2. Diagnostic runners
3. Electronic health records (EHR)
4. Training: Learner support centres
5. Infrastructure
6. Team incentives
32
29. PROPOSED SERVICES THROUGH HWCs
Care in pregnancy
and child-birth
Neonatal and infant
health care services
Childhood and
adolescent health
care services
Family planning,
Contraceptive
services and Other
Reproductive Health
Care services
Management of
Communicable
Diseases: National
Health Programs
General Out-patient
care for acute
simple illnesses and
minor ailments
Screening and
Management of
Non-Communicable
diseases
Screening and
Basic management
of Mental health
ailments
Care for Common
Ophthalmic & ENT
problems
Basic Dental health
care
Geriatric and
palliative health care
services
Trauma Care (that
can be managed at
this level) and
Emergency Medical
services
33
30. ANALYSIS OF HWCs
1. Rs 1,200 Crore has been allotted; rest from state
2. ‘Rate limiting factor’ - MLHPs or CHO, ANM with training
3. Underserve their primary objectives (promotive and preventive)
4. Upgrading SCs to HWCs without matching referral setup can be
counterproductive
34
32. STRENGTHS
1. Apparent shift from ‘disease specific’ and ‘Reproductive and child health’
2. From ‘poor only’ to expanded approach of vulnerable and deprived population
3. Seemingly high level of political commitment
4. Acknowledgement of linkage between better health and economic growth of India
5. Well-functioning primary healthcare system - potential to cater 80-90% of health needs
36
33. WEAKNESSES
1. HWCs: only part of primary healthcare system
2. Private sector & insurance: limited to financial viability
3. Out-patient department visits: not part of PM-JAY
4. Moral hazards
5. Impersonation
37
34. OPPORTUNITIES
1. Alignment with NHP 2017 and NITI Aayog’s three year Action Agenda 2017-20.
2. Media attention - can bring desired public accountability to expedite implementation
3. Progressive universalization: UHC is about everyone, everywhere!
4. Global and national level focus on universal health coverage (UHC)
5. Upcoming general elections and assembly elections in a number of states
6. Potential - innovative models and strategies for strengthening entire healthcare system
38
35. THREATS
1. Change in the political leadership or the priorities of the elected governments
2. Limited buy-in and interest by the Indian states: state’s own schemes
3. Challenge in availability of mid-level care providers
4. Focus on these components only and the other broader health system needs ignored
5. Disproportionate focus on one of two initiatives in ABP
39
People are either compelled to, or prefer to, seek care from private providers; 2017 in Lancet journal
Integrate RSBY into the health system and make it a part of the comprehensive health care vision of Government of India; 17 times less money; thrice the benefeciaries;
Around 8.9% of elderly
not covering outpatient care; QR codes to families
Public/ private; NHP 2017: GDP 2.5% by 2025; state should spend >8% budget; catastrophic HE by 25% decrease 2025; 20% more phc 60% more
TOTAL BUDGET 52k CRORES
Packages rates, OT; to prevent misuse; PM-JAY has defined 1,350 medical packages cheaper by 15% CGHS covering surgery, medical and day care treatments including medicines, diagnostics and transport. No additional new families can be added under AB-NHPM. However, names of additional family members can be added for those families whose names are already on the SECC list
outreach strategy, data grievance redressal; print & electronic media, social media traditional media, IEC materials and outdoor activities;
outreach strategy, data grievance redressal; print & electronic media, social media traditional media, IEC materials and outdoor activities;
outreach strategy, data grievance redressal; print & electronic media, social media traditional media, IEC materials and outdoor activities;
Union Health and Family Welfare Minister and Vice-Chairman of National Institution for Transforming India (NITI Aayog) rajiv kumar, Secretary (Health and Family Welfare) and Member (Health), Indu Bhushan is ceo of PMJAY & NHA; Dinesh Arora ex director Niti now deputy ceo.
outreach strategy, data grievance redressal; print & electronic media, social media traditional media, IEC materials and outdoor activities;
Arogya Mitra; ecard (golden record); the beneficiary is informed of the amount of charges they may have to bear in case they are not hospitalized e.g. diagnostics (if any)
(medical coordinator); The doctors have a standard template for pre-authorization form
PMJAY is an upgraded RSBY
NHP 2017 central bureau of health intelligence; Rural health stats 2017
1 allopathic doctor, NCD screening
1 allopathic doctor, NCD screening
NCDs contributed to nearly twothird of all mortality, HWCs can tackle the epidemiological transition
, requires broader strengthening of entire health system; OPD which forms a big part including diagnostics