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


2. Why in the News


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

Social

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. AB-PMJAY provides health coverage of ₹5 lakh per family per year to ~10.74 crore families identified through the SECC database. [S1]
  2. NHM comprises two sub-missions: NRHM (National Rural Health Mission) and NUHM (National Urban Health Mission). [S3]
  3. PM-ABHIM (Pradhan Mantri Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission) was launched in 2021 — India's largest pan-national health infrastructure programme. [S2]
  4. Health is a State subject under List II of the 7th Schedule of the Constitution.
  5. 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.
  6. The Right to Health is not an explicit Fundamental Right but has been read into Article 21 (Right to Life) by the Supreme Court.
  7. NHP 2017 targeted raising public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP; India's current spending is approximately 1.9–2.1% of GDP.
  8. ASHA workers are paid performance-based incentives — they are classified as volunteers, not government employees, denying them minimum wage protections.
  9. The Clinical Establishments (Registration and Regulation) Act was enacted in 2010 to regulate private hospitals; implementation varies by state.
  10. RSBY (Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana) — launched 2008 — was the precursor scheme to AB-PMJAY.
  11. The National Medical Commission (NMC) Act, 2020 replaced the Medical Council of India (MCI) as the apex medical regulatory body.
  12. Out-of-pocket expenditure on health in India pushes an estimated 6 crore people into poverty annually (WHO estimate). [S7]
  13. The Bhore Committee (1946) first recommended a universal, state-funded healthcare model for India — its core recommendations remain largely unimplemented.
  14. Under AB-PMJAY, empanelled private hospitals — not just public facilities — can bill for treatment, making it a demand-side financing (insurance) model.
  15. 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:

  1. "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)

  2. "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)

  3. "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

  1. 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.

  2. 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).

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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