CGHS enhances financial powers of officials to expedite treatment

Now I have sufficient grounded facts from the article (Tier 4) and PIB (Tier 1) to write a comprehensive study note.


CGHS Enhances Financial Powers of Officials to Expedite Treatment


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Full Name Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS)
Year of Establishment 1954
Implementing Ministry Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW)
Primary Card Holders ~15 lakh [S1]
Total Beneficiaries >42 lakh [S1]
Cities Covered 80 (as of recent data) [S1]
Allopathic Wellness Centres 338 [S1]
AYUSH Units 103 [S1]
Nodal Authority (top) Additional Secretary & Director General, CGHS
Eligibility Central govt employees, pensioners, MPs, judges, freedom fighters, press accredited journalists, ex-governors, etc.
Modes of Treatment Cashless (empanelled hospitals) + Reimbursement
Enabling provisions Ministry of Health & Family Welfare administrative orders; not a standalone Act — governed under Central Services (Medical Attendance) Rules

Revised Financial Powers (June 2026): [S3]

Authority Earlier Limit (Medical Reimbursement/Hospital Bills) Revised Limit
Additional Director (CGHS City/Zone) ₹7 lakh ₹15 lakh
Director ₹15 lakh ₹25 lakh
Addl. Secretary & DG, CGHS ₹25 lakh ₹50 lakh
Cases > ₹50 lakh Referred to Union Health Ministry (with IFD concurrence)

Revised Powers for Unlisted Investigations/Procedures/Implants (June 2026): [S3]

Authority Revised Power
Additional Director (City/Zone) Up to ₹2 lakh
Director Up to ₹5 lakh
Addl. Secretary & DG, CGHS (Higher threshold — exact figure from article excerpt)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Administrative

Social

Economic / Fiscal

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Ethical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. CGHS was established in 1954 — one of the oldest central government health welfare programmes.
  2. Implementing ministry: Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW) — not Ministry of Personnel.
  3. CGHS covers more than 42 lakh beneficiaries through ~15 lakh primary card holders. [S1]
  4. Number of CGHS cities grew from 25 (2014) to 80 — more than tripled under recent expansion. [S1]
  5. 338 Allopathic Wellness Centres and 103 AYUSH Units constitute the primary CGHS infrastructure. [S1]
  6. Minimum card-holder threshold for a new CGHS Wellness Centre: 2,000 card holders. [S1]
  7. As of June 2026, Additional Directors (CGHS city/zone) can approve reimbursement up to ₹15 lakh (revised from ₹7 lakh). [S3]
  8. Directors can now approve up to ₹25 lakh (revised from ₹15 lakh). [S3]
  9. Additional Secretary & DG, CGHS limit revised to ₹50 lakh (from ₹25 lakh). [S3]
  10. Cases exceeding ₹50 lakh are referred to the Union Health Ministry with Integrated Finance Division (IFD) concurrence. [S3]
  11. CGHS beneficiaries aged 75 years and above can consult specialists without referral — a prior simplification reform. [S2]
  12. CGHS is governed under Central Services (Medical Attendance) Rules — not a standalone parliamentary Act.
  13. The latest June 2026 reform also revised approval powers for unlisted investigations, procedures, and implants at multiple levels.
  14. CGHS was inaugurated in Silchar (Assam) — indicating northeastern expansion of the network. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; issues relating to health - GS-III (marginal): Government budgeting; public expenditure management

Specific syllabus headings: - Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States - Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health

Plausible Mains question stems:

  1. "The recent enhancement of financial powers of CGHS officials is a step towards administrative decentralisation in health service delivery. Critically analyse." (GS-II, 250 words)

  2. "What are the structural challenges in the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) that impede timely medical treatment for pensioners? Suggest systemic reforms." (GS-II, 250 words)

  3. "Delegation of financial authority in government welfare schemes can improve efficiency but also increases fiduciary risk. Discuss in the context of CGHS reforms." (GS-II/GS-IV, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY India's largest health insurance scheme; contrast with CGHS — universal vs. targeted; eligibility differences
Central Services (Medical Attendance) Rules The statutory/administrative framework within which CGHS operates
Employees' State Insurance Scheme (ESIC) Parallel health scheme for organised sector workers; compare governance, funding, beneficiary coverage
National Health Policy 2017 Policy framework under which CGHS reforms are contextualised; targets universal health coverage
Integrated Finance Division (IFD) Mandatory concurrence for CGHS cases >₹50L; crucial to understand GoI financial management architecture
Delegation of Financial Powers Rules (DFPR) The overarching GoI framework for financial delegation — CGHS revision is one instance of DFPR application
Elderly Care Policy / National Programme for Health Care of the Elderly (NPHCE) Directly relevant given pensioners dominate CGHS beneficiary profile

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: CGHS is under Ministry of Health & Family Welfare — NOT Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions (even though it serves government employees/pensioners).

  2. Confusing CGHS with ESIC: ESIC covers organised private sector workers under the ESI Act 1948; CGHS covers central government employees and pensioners — fundamentally different beneficiary sets and legal bases.

  3. Confusing CGHS with Ayushman Bharat: Ayushman Bharat–PMJAY targets BPL/poor families; CGHS serves central government personnel. They are separate, non-overlapping schemes.

  4. Wrong financial threshold: Post-June 2026 revision, the Additional Director limit is ₹15 lakh (not ₹7 lakh). Exam questions may test old vs. new limits — memorise the revised figures.

  5. Thinking CGHS is statutory: CGHS is an administrative scheme under executive rules (Central Services Medical Attendance Rules), not a scheme mandated by a specific parliamentary Act. Confusing it with schemes under named Acts is a common trap.

  6. Geographic scope: CGHS is available in 80 cities — not pan-India. ESIC and PMJAY have broader/different geographic reach. Do not assume universal CGHS coverage.


11. Sources