Privatisation and policy gaps threaten India’s public health system
UPSC Study Note: Privatisation and Policy Gaps Threaten India's Public Health System
1. At a Glance
- India's public health system faces a structural crisis driven by chronic underfunding, rapid privatisation of secondary/tertiary care, widening social determinants of health, and systemic policy failures on NCDs, pollution, and food safety. [S1][S5]
- Relevance: High-yield for GS-II (health governance, welfare schemes, PPP) and GS-I (social issues, inequality); also touches GS-III (economic policy) and GS-IV (medical ethics).
- The State's retreat from healthcare provision—while channelling public money through schemes like AB-PMJAY into the private sector—creates a paradox of publicly subsidised privatisation. [S1][S4]
- ASHA workers, the backbone of last-mile delivery, remain denied basic labour rights, signalling a governance failure in the very architecture of NHM. [S5]
2. Why in the News
- An analytical piece in The Hindu (7 January 2026, International Print Edition) framed India's health crisis comprehensively: fake medicines, unnecessary surgeries, unethical clinical trials, rising NCDs, pollution-linked disease, and deepening privatisation all converging simultaneously. [S5]
- The AB-PMJAY scheme's model of routing public funds to empanelled private hospitals has come under scrutiny for incentivising over-treatment and not strengthening public infrastructure. [S1][S4]
- Growing private equity penetration of hospital chains (2024–26) has restructured clinical practice around monthly revenue targets, raising medical ethics concerns. [S5]
- PM-ABHIM (launched October 2021) claims to address infrastructure gaps, but ground-level outcomes remain contested. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Period | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1946 | Bhore Committee Report — recommended universal, state-funded healthcare; largely unimplemented |
| 1983 | First National Health Policy (NHP) — set goal of "Health for All by 2000" |
| 2002 | NHP 2002 — acknowledged role of private sector; laid ground for PPP in health |
| 2005 | Launch of National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) — community health workers (ASHA), sub-centre strengthening |
| 2013 | NRHM expanded into National Health Mission (NHM) — added National Urban Health Mission (NUHM) [S3] |
| 2017 | NHP 2017 — targeted raising public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP |
| 2018 | Launch of Ayushman Bharat — (i) Health & Wellness Centres (HWCs) for primary care; (ii) AB-PMJAY for hospitalisation insurance [S1][S4] |
| 2021 | PM Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission (PM-ABHIM) — infrastructure scale-up [S2] |
| 2023 | Ayushman Bharat expanded to cover all citizens above 70 years regardless of income [S6] |
Predecessors: ESIS (1952), CGHS (1954), Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) (2008 — precursor to AB-PMJAY).
4. Core Static Facts
Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), GoI
Key Schemes & Nodal Bodies:
| Scheme | Key Details |
|---|---|
| AB-PMJAY | ₹5 lakh/family/year; covers ~10.74 crore poor & deprived families (SECC database); cashless hospitalisation [S1][S4] |
| NHM | Sub-missions: NRHM (rural) + NUHM (urban); free services at public facilities at sub-district & district levels [S3] |
| PM-ABHIM | Launched 2021; pan-national; builds pandemic-ready infrastructure [S2] |
| HWCs | Upgrade of Sub-Health Centres & Primary Health Centres into Health & Wellness Centres under Ayushman Bharat |
| ASHA | Accredited Social Health Activist; frontline community health worker under NHM; paid performance-based incentives, not salary |
Constitutional Basis: - Health is a State subject (List II, 7th Schedule) - Article 21 (Right to Life) — SC has read right to health into it (Paschim Banga Khet Majoor Samity v. State of WB, 1996) - Article 47 — DPSP: State duty to raise nutrition levels and public health
Key Policy Target: NHP 2017 set target of public health expenditure at 2.5% of GDP (India's actual expenditure remains ~1.9–2.1% of GDP as of 2024–25 estimates). [S6]
SECC: Socio-Economic Caste Census — the database used to identify AB-PMJAY beneficiaries.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- India's out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) on health remains among the highest globally, pushing ~6 crore people into poverty annually (WHO estimates). [S7]
- AB-PMJAY channels public funds to private hospitals (empanelled); critics argue this subsidises private sector expansion without building permanent public capacity. [S4]
- Private equity entry into hospital chains has introduced profit-extraction logic — doctors assigned monthly revenue targets, creating incentives for over-diagnosis and unnecessary procedures. [S5]
- Public health expenditure stagnation below 2% of GDP limits the fiscal space for genuine universal health coverage. [S6]
Social
- Social determinants — class, caste, religion, gender — profoundly determine health outcomes and life expectancy in India. [S5]
- ASHA workers (predominantly women, SC/ST communities) perform essential last-mile work but are classified as "volunteers", denying them minimum wage, social security, and trade union rights. [S5]
- Ultra-processed food (UPF) consumption is driving an NCD epidemic (diabetes, cardiovascular disease, obesity) with disproportionate impact on lower-income groups unable to access quality dietary alternatives. [S5]
- Access to quality tertiary care is effectively rationed by income — a structural equity failure.
Environmental
- Air pollution, water contamination, and soil pollution are identified as direct disease-burden drivers, yet regulatory enforcement remains weak. [S5]
- Climate change is pushing millions into new sickness patterns (heat stress, vector-borne disease range expansion, food insecurity). [S5]
- Policy gaps between MoHFW, MoEFCC, Ministry of Jal Shakti, and FSSAI create coordination failures on environment-health nexus.
Legal / Constitutional
- Right to health derives from Article 21 (SC jurisprudence), not an explicit fundamental right — limiting enforceability.
- Clinical Establishments (Registration and Regulation) Act, 2010 — meant to regulate private hospitals; implementation is uneven across states.
- Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 (amended) — primary legislation on medicines; fake drug problem persists despite provisions. [S5]
- Consumer Protection Act, 2019 — medical negligence now clearly within scope; however, access to justice remains unequal.
Ethical / Governance
- Fake medicines, unnecessary surgeries, unethical clinical trials constitute major ethical crises in the healthcare ecosystem. [S5]
- PPP (Public-Private Partnerships) under AB-PMJAY — designed as equity tools — risk becoming conduits for private enrichment without commensurate quality obligations. [S1][S4]
- Conflict of interest in clinical practice: pharma-doctor relationships, device company kickbacks — MCI (now NMC) regulations remain weakly enforced.
- National Medical Commission (NMC) Act, 2020 replaced the corrupt MCI but continues to face criticism on regulatory capture.
Administrative
- Centre-State split: Health is a State subject but schemes like NHM, AB-PMJAY are centrally sponsored — creating fund utilisation gaps, differential implementation, and accountability voids. [S3]
- ASHA incentive structure — non-salary-based — leads to attrition, underpayment, and rights denial; multiple ASHA worker strikes recorded (2022–2025). [S5]
- Human resource crisis: India has approximately 0.7 doctors per 1,000 population (WHO norm: 1 per 1,000) — acute in rural/tribal areas. [S7]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- January 2026: The Hindu analysis highlights convergence of privatisation, policy failure, NCD epidemic, and medical ethics crisis as a systemic public health emergency. [S5]
- June 2025: PIB factsheet on "Affordable and Accessible Healthcare for All" documents MoHFW's position on scheme outreach and infrastructure expansion. [S6]
- October 2025: PIB document on PM-ABHIM progress marks four years of implementation — focus on pandemic-resilient infrastructure. [S2]
- 2023–24: AB-PMJAY extended universally to senior citizens (70+) regardless of socioeconomic status — major expansion of coverage. [S6]
- 2024–26: Growing concerns over private equity acquisitions of mid-size hospital chains and the resulting transformation of clinical incentive structures. [S5]
- World Bank (2024): Evaluation document on AB-PMJAY notes implementation challenges including fraud, empanelment quality control, and limited impact on out-of-pocket expenditure. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- AB-PMJAY provides health coverage of ₹5 lakh per family per year to ~10.74 crore families identified through the SECC database. [S1]
- NHM comprises two sub-missions: NRHM (National Rural Health Mission) and NUHM (National Urban Health Mission). [S3]
- PM-ABHIM (Pradhan Mantri Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission) was launched in 2021 — India's largest pan-national health infrastructure programme. [S2]
- Health is a State subject under List II of the 7th Schedule of the Constitution.
- Article 47 of the Constitution — a Directive Principle — mandates the State to raise the level of nutrition and standard of living and improve public health.
- The Right to Health is not an explicit Fundamental Right but has been read into Article 21 (Right to Life) by the Supreme Court.
- NHP 2017 targeted raising public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP; India's current spending is approximately 1.9–2.1% of GDP.
- ASHA workers are paid performance-based incentives — they are classified as volunteers, not government employees, denying them minimum wage protections.
- The Clinical Establishments (Registration and Regulation) Act was enacted in 2010 to regulate private hospitals; implementation varies by state.
- RSBY (Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana) — launched 2008 — was the precursor scheme to AB-PMJAY.
- The National Medical Commission (NMC) Act, 2020 replaced the Medical Council of India (MCI) as the apex medical regulatory body.
- Out-of-pocket expenditure on health in India pushes an estimated 6 crore people into poverty annually (WHO estimate). [S7]
- The Bhore Committee (1946) first recommended a universal, state-funded healthcare model for India — its core recommendations remain largely unimplemented.
- Under AB-PMJAY, empanelled private hospitals — not just public facilities — can bill for treatment, making it a demand-side financing (insurance) model.
- Ultra-processed food (UPF) consumption driving NCDs is a recognised policy gap in India's food regulatory ecosystem (under FSSAI). [S5]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper → Syllabus Heading: - GS-II: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources; Government policies and interventions; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; PPP models - GS-I: Social empowerment; poverty and developmental issues; role of women (ASHA workers) - GS-IV: Medical ethics; accountability of public servants; role of civil society
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"India's Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY scheme, while expanding coverage, risks deepening the structural dependence of public health on the private sector. Critically examine." (GS-II, 15 marks)
-
"The chronic underfunding of India's public health system, combined with rapid privatisation, undermines the constitutional right to life under Article 21. Discuss with reference to the role of social determinants of health." (GS-II/GS-I, 15 marks)
-
"ASHA workers are the backbone of India's last-mile health delivery, yet their rights remain unprotected. Analyse the ethical and administrative dimensions of this paradox." (GS-II/GS-IV, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Ayushman Bharat scheme (AB-PMJAY + HWCs) | Core scheme under scrutiny; architecture, funding, PPP model |
| National Health Mission (NHM) | Foundational programme; ASHA, sub-centres, RMNCH+A |
| Social Determinants of Health (WHO framework) | Explains caste/class/gender inequity in health outcomes |
| Out-of-Pocket Expenditure & Universal Health Coverage (UHC) | India's UHC SDG commitments (SDG 3.8); fiscal architecture |
| Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) Policy | NCD burden (diabetes, CVD, cancer); National Programme for NCDs |
| FSSAI & Food Safety Regulation | Ultra-processed food regulation; nexus with NCD epidemic |
| Medical Ethics & NMC Act 2020 | Regulatory framework post-MCI; clinical practice standards |
| Climate Change and Health (WHO) | Heat stress, vector-borne disease — environmental-health policy link |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
AB-PMJAY vs. NHM confusion: AB-PMJAY is a hospitalisation insurance scheme (demand-side); NHM is a supply-side programme that funds public health infrastructure and workers. They are distinct components of Ayushman Bharat.
-
Health as Fundamental Right: Aspirants often state health is a Fundamental Right — it is NOT explicitly listed in Part III; it is read into Article 21 by the SC. Do not confuse with Article 47 (DPSP).
-
ASHA worker status: Often mistakenly called "government employees" — they are volunteers paid incentives, not salaried; this distinction is the source of their rights denial and is the crux of policy critique.
-
Ministry confusion: Food safety (ultra-processed foods) is regulated by FSSAI under MoHFW, but environmental pollution falls under MoEFCC — cross-ministry coordination failure is the real issue, not a single ministry's lapse.
-
PM-ABHIM ≠ AB-PMJAY: PM-ABHIM (2021) is an infrastructure mission (building labs, hospitals, pandemic preparedness); AB-PMJAY (2018) is a health insurance scheme. These are frequently conflated in MCQs.
11. Sources
- [S1] Affordable and Accessible Healthcare for All — https://www.pib.gov.in/FactsheetDetails.aspx?Id=149254 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] PM-ABHIM Building Pandemic-Ready Healthcare Infrastructure (October 2025) — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/oct/doc20251024674701.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S3] National Health Mission – Impact and Learnings for the Future — https://niti.gov.in/sites/default/files/2023-03/Impact%20of%20NHM%20on%20Health%20Systems%20Governance%20&%20Human%20Resources.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] India: Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Scheme (World Bank) — https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/099032724220521781/pdf/P16801019a2a84001a6f319268e3d7288e.pdf — (Tier 2)
- [S5] "Privatisation and policy gaps threaten India's public health system" — The Hindu, 7 January 2026, p. 11, International Print Edition — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-07/th_international/articleGM2FDG4D7-13023585.ece — (Tier 4, primary article)
- [S6] Affordable and Accessible Healthcare for All (June 2025 Factsheet) — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/jun/doc2025617571401.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S7] Ministry of Health & Family Welfare Initiatives & Achievements 2025 — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2026/jan/doc202611749801.pdf — (Tier 1)