Sunday, 19 July 2020
हरियाणा में स्वास्थ्य सेवाओं का ढांचा
Friday, 17 July 2020
कुछ बिंदु
दुनिया के स्तर पर
1 . संसार की कम से कम आधी आबादी जरूरी स्वास्थ्य सेवाओं से वंचित है।
2 . करीब १० करोड़ लोग 100 मिलियन प्रतिदिन 1 . 90 पोंड पर गुजारा करते हैं।
3 . 80 करोड़ लोग (दुनिया की जनसंख्या का लगभग 12 %) का 10 % परिवार के स्वास्थ्य पर खर्च करते हैं।
भारत के स्तर पर
1 . प्राइवेट सेक्टर 80 % opd सेवाएं और 60 % दाखिल मरीजों की सेवाएं प्रदान है।
2 . 77 % ग्रामीण और 70 % अर्बन में आउट ऑफ़ पॉकेट स्वास्थ्य खर्च का सिर्फ दवाओं पर होता है।
3 . इस आउट ऑफ़ पॉकेट स्वास्थ्य खर्च के कारण पिछले साल 5 . 5 करोड़ लोग गरीबी रेखा से नीचे चले गए
लोक सभा में प्रस्तुत --अगस्त 28 , 2019
. जन स्वास्थय सेवाएं और स्वास्थ्य के सामाजिक निर्णायक
1 . जन स्वास्थ्य सेवाओं पर बहुत कम खर्च
2 . जरूरत से कम स्वास्थ्य सेवाओं का ढांचा --उप स्वास्थ्य केंद्र प्राथमिक स्वास्थ्य केंद्र और सामुदायिक स्वास्थ्य केंद्र-- डाक्टरों और नर्सों की कमी --1000 पर 0 . 7 और 1. 7 हैं
3 . स्पेशलिस्ट्स की कमी --- जनरल सर्जन , स्त्री रोग विशेषज्ञ, शिशु रोग विशेषज्ञ , फिजिसियन और बेहोशी विशेषज्ञ
Deccan Hearald .com Dec 22, 2017
सुपर स्पेशलिस्ट्स
4000 कार्डियोलॉजिस्ट हैं 88000 की जरूरत है, 315 पीजी सीट्स 3375 होनी चाहियें । नेफ्रोलोजी --1200 डाक्टर , 40000 की जरूरत। शिशु रोग विशेषज्ञ --23000 हैं , जरूरत --230000 . एंडोक्रिनोलोजिस्ट --650 हैं। 28000 की जरूरत है। USA --20000 UG , 40000 PG . भारत --62000 UG , 14500 PG सीट्स
Physicians per 1000 population --0.7
Nursesper 1000 population --1.7
Hospital beds per 1000 population --0.7
Institutional Delivary per 100,000 live births --190
Life expectancy--66.2 years
4 . स्वास्थ्य पर जेब से खर्च बहुत ज्यादा है।
5 स्वास्थ्य सेवाओं तक पहुंच की कमी और स्वास्थ्य सेवाएं प्राप्त करने के सामर्थ्य की कमी।
6 . शहरी और ग्रामीण विभाजन --periodic labour force survey (2017 --18 ) प्रति ७ डाक्टरों में से सिर्फ 1 डाक्टर ग्रामीण क्षेत्र में है 6 शहरी क्षेत्र में हैं।
7 . अमीर -- गरीब विभाजन
8 . जेंडर विभाजन व जात आधारित विभाजन
9 . स्वास्थ्य कर्मियों के क्षमता निर्माण की कमी ( ट्रेनिंग की कमी )
10 अपने स्वास्थ्य के बारे जनता जागरूकता की कमी
11 . टेक्नोलॉजी अपग्रडेशन की कमी
12 . वातावरण प्रदूषण --कीटनाशकों का अंधाधुंध इस्तेमाल
13 . Govt Funded Health Insurance (GFHI)Schemes like Prime Minister Jan Arogya Yojna
UTTRAKHAND/ Uttranchal
POPULATION--2020--1.17 crore
13 districts
dehradoon largest district
BJP Govt.
INDRANIL
Cuba in the Last Stretch of the Pandemic
Introduction
The following article by Fernando Ravsberg appeared in the Salvadorian digital daily news site ContraPunto on June 24. The translation from the Spanish, which includes a few explanatory additions, is by The Bullet.It is worth mentioning some of the significant developments that have occurred in the two weeks since Ravsberg’s article appeared.
- Cuba’s efforts against the virus continue to show remarkable results. July 7 marked the 11th consecutive day without a single death attributable to Covid-19. As of that date, the country had seen only 2,399 confirmed cases of infection by the virus, and of these, 2,242 of those infected have recovered. The death toll is only 86.
- Significantly, given the experience of wealthy countries in North America and Western Europe, not a single Cuban health worker, whether a doctor or a floor cleaner, has succumbed to the virus.
- The country is not lowering its guard. The goal is to prevent the virus from taking root anywhere in the country. The aggressive pursuit of the virus that Ravsberg describes continues. The difference is that now that the virus is in retreat, the strategy is even more effective. Nevertheless, the virus is proving to be most tenacious in the province of Havana, and particularly in the capital city. The province accounts for some 57 per cent of all confirmed cases on the island, and half of those killed by the virus lived in the capital city.
- Recovery of social and economic life is proceeding cautiously, through a three-stage process based on objective criteria. Provinces and localities advance through the stages according to their progress in fighting the epidemic. Thirteen of the 15 provinces officially entered the first phase of recovery on June 18, followed by Matanzas a few days later. On July 3 Havana entered phase one, and all the other provinces except Matanzas entered phase two.
- Interprovincial passenger transportation remains suspended, but public transportation within cities has been restored. Restoring urban transportation in the vast city of Havana, essential for economic activity and social life, is presenting some difficult challenges. Transport capacity is limited, so special efforts must be made to avoid overcrowding, to enforce social distancing and mask wearing on the buses and at bus stops, and, most of all, to convince people to behave responsibly.
- The country has begun to welcome international tourists, along the lines explained by Ravsberg.
- Cuba’s medical internationalism, demonstrated so powerfully during the pandemic, has gained a good deal of attention and admiration internationally. An international campaign to nominate Cuba’s Henry Reeves brigades for the Nobel Peace Prize is now under way. Initial signatories of the petition include Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Pérez Esquivel; former president of Ecuador, Rafael Correa; actors Danny Glover and Mark Ruffalo; writers Alice Walker, Noam Chomsky and Nancy Morejón; filmmakers Oliver Stone and Petra Costa; and Cuban singer-songwriter Silvio Rodríguez. Meanwhile, the fund appeal of the Canadian Network on Cuba has, to date, raised $45,000 to support the work of the Cuban international brigades fighting the pandemic.
The measures adopted by the Cuban government have been extremely successful. The archipelago is emerging from the crisis with a total of just 2,319 people who were infected with the virus, 2,130 of which have recovered, while 85 have died. [The remainder, approximately 100 people, are still undergoing treatment…eds.] The Cuban public health system was prepared for massive casualties, but the truth is that in the worst moments of the crisis less than 60 per cent of its hospital resources were needed.
Currently, local and interprovincial transport is moving again, except in Havana, and hotels have begun opening their doors to Cuban vacationers. International tourism is slated to begin on July 1, but only on the adjacent islands [the Cays], which have their own airports. All tourists who arrive at these resorts will be tested for Covid-19, as will the staff who work there. Tourists and hotel staff will not be allowed to leave the cays or come into contact with the neighbouring populations.
The Cuban Strategy
Cuba’s quarantine-based process to deal with the pandemic developed gradually. Initially, some Cubans criticized the delay in closing the country’s borders or suspending school. However, once the full lockdown went into effect, international travel ended completely. The only passenger planes that landed on the island during this period were those provided by countries that had requested emergency medical aid from Cuba. These flights carried Cuban medical teams back to those countries. More generally, the authorities established a deadline, after which no one was allowed to leave the country. Some 7,000 Cubans resident in other countries who were visiting the island at the time and about 5,000 foreigners chose to stay and ride out the pandemic in Cuba.The government suspended all interprovincial and urban transportation. All vehicles were used exclusively to transport health workers or other essential services personnel. The police controlled the streets, enforcing the mandatory use of face masks, dispersing gatherings and maintaining the necessary distance between people lined up outside the stores. These lineups to buy food became one of the main health dangers. [Severe shortages of basic foodstuffs are common in Cuba, as are long lines once supplies do arrive in the shops…eds.]
The troops of the Armed Forces, prepared for chemical or bacteriological warfare, sprayed the streets with chlorine, using their tank trucks and motorized pumps. To prevent the spread of the virus, thousands of soldiers stopped people from leaving heavily infected areas. People coming from areas with very few positive cases were allowed only limited access to infected areas. [The local quarantines were adjusted frequently, in accordance with the severity of the outbreak in the area. They were lifted as the threat receded…eds.]
Payment of taxes, electricity, water, gas, telephone, and internet bills was postponed, as were the installments on bank loans. The state – owner of 90 per cent of the companies – covered the wages of those laid off because of the pandemic. Social workers brought food to the elderly who lived alone, so that they would not have to venture out into the street. Restaurants sold food for consumption at home.
Whenever the public health authorities identified an individual carrying the virus, they investigated who might have been the source of the infection, and who the infected person might have been in contact with after they were infected. All of the people identified in that way became suspects. Some were transferred to quarantine centers for special treatment; others were quarantined at home for 14 days, watched over by their neighbors. Doctors visited them every day. At the slightest symptom, they were transferred to the hospital and tested for the virus. Even today, some 2,000 tests are still being performed every day. This system allows many asymptomatic people, the most dangerous category, to be detected.
At the same time, a country-wide investigation was rolled out, going from house to house across the whole island. Doctors, nurses and students of medicine, nursing and stomatologists knocked on every door to inquire whether or not anyone in the family had any symptoms. [Stomatology is the branch of medicine or dentistry concerned with the structures, functions, and diseases of the mouth…eds.] This very morning a student stopped by my house to ask: “Is everyone all right, does anyone have a cough or fever?” The Minister of Health, Dr. José Ángel Portal, has explained the strategy this way: “It is to not wait for the virus to appear, but to go out and look for it.”
Paradoxically, information – one of the major deficiencies in this country – has been available like never before. Every morning at nine am, the chief of Public Health Epidemiology, Dr. Francisco Durán, presents a report on national TV to share the statistics of the previous day. Cubans then find out how many people remain under observation, how many tests were performed, how many infections have been detected, how many patients are in serious or critical condition, and how many have died during the previous 24 hours.
Crises Are in the Cuban DNA
In spite of Cuba’s small size and population, and its lack of material resources, it has been one of the most successful countries in the world in dealing with the pandemic.One of Cuba’s secrets is that it has spent 60 years preparing and training for a US attack. Cubans are accustomed to living in a state of crisis. Three-quarters of them have lived their whole lives suffering the effects of the US economic blockade. The Cuban system includes mechanisms, such as a ration book, that enable it to distribute products equitably. The Cuban Civil Defense system can mobilize hundreds of thousands of people in a few hours.
Above all, Cuba can count on a health system that serves all citizens without exception, with 85,000 nurses and 95,000 doctors for 11 million inhabitants, three times more physicians per capita than Spain. In total, the Cuban system employs more than half a million health professionals, including health technicians and stomatologists (since dental care is also free). The practice of private medicine is prohibited, so all hospitals, polyclinics, family doctors’ houses in the community, and all human and material medical resources belong to the government.
Well-Trained Doctors
Cuban doctors have a lot of experience in combating epidemics. Cuban international health brigades stationed on the island have faced all kinds of diseases in a variety of countries. Some of these medical missions, such as the ones sent to fight Ebola in Africa or the 8,000 doctors who worked in Brazil, coordinated their efforts with the World Health Organization (WHO), with which Cuba maintains close collaboration.Weeks before the first infected persons were detected on the island, specialists from Cuba were already receiving training from the WHO on how to fight the coronavirus. In January, the first Cuban doctors arrived in China to study the situation. More than 20 Cuban health brigades, with some 2,500 members, have responded to requests for help from other countries. They are now active fighting Covid-19 in Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, Italy, and Andorra.
Cuba’s task has been made especially difficult because even during the pandemic the Trump Administration has increased pressure on companies to prevent them from trading with the island. The US has even prevented donations of health supplies and equipment from reaching Cuba. For example, Washington threatened to impose financial sanctions on the Colombian airline, Avianca, thereby forcing it to cancel its contract to transport medical equipment and face masks from China to Havana. The supplies had been donated by Chinese businessmen. Washington has also intervened to prevent companies from selling ventilators to Cuba.
The White House is working hard to dissuade countries from calling on Cuba for medical services. It is preparing new legislation that will allow it to impose sanctions on countries that do so. It understands that this is a strategic sector of the Cuban economy, since the sale of medical services represents 75 per cent of Cuba’s foreign exchange earnings. Despite the US pressure, Cuba’s health brigades are present in more than 60 nations, and that number continues to grow. For example, the United Arab Emirates has just requested permanent healthcare assistance from Cuba. •
Monday, 13 July 2020
Gender Issues in Health in Haryana
Sr Prof, Surgery ,PGIMS, Rohtak.
2003..2004
It is widely acknowledged on the bases of studies done in diverse settings, that inequalities in health across population groups arise largely as a consequence of differences in social and economic status and differential access to power and resources.. The heaviest burden of ill health is borne by those who are most deprived, not just economically, but also in terms of capabilities such as literacy levels and access to information. In the words of Noble Laureate Amartya Sen, India, with its present population of 1 billion has to account for some 25 million missing women.
On the top of that in a modern world of today this discrimination has not allowed a gender sensitive language to develop. There is mankind but no woman kind; there is house wife but no house husband; there is house mother but no house father; kitchen maid is there but no kitchen man. The unmarried woman crosses the threshold from bachelor girl to spinster to old maid but the unmarried man is always bachelor.
The gender discrimination has got its roots in our older cultural practices and way of living also, of course it has got a material base. The cultural practices of Haryana have a gender bias. At the time of birth of a boy, it is celebrated by beating a ‘Thali’ whereas the birth of a girl is mourned (matka phorna) in one way or the other; at the time of delivery, if a child is male, the mother will be given 10Kg ghee (do dhari ghee) and if a child is female, the mother will be given 5 Kg ghee; the sixth day (chhath) of a male child will be celebrated; the namkaran sanskar will be done if the child is male; the girls are not allowed to fire the funeral of the family some members where as the can burn mounds of wood in chulha at home . As the number of woman has been going down in Haryana, they are becoming more insecure in the society. The violence in home and outside has increased in Haryana and is affecting the health of women adversely. The news papers carry many news items daily in this regard. The doctors and the para medical staff also behaves as the whole society behaves on the gender issues. The number of gynecologists in govt. hospitals is very meager compounding the women’s health still further.
Rapes/Gangrapes-66,Kidnapping/Abduction-62,Molestation-142,Dowry cases-90,Dowry deaths-27 Sexual harassment-5 . .
The unregistered cases are many more. This indicates that the price of women or the importance of woman has not increased by the decrease of their number as conceived by many people in Haryana. Violence affects the health of women in many ways.The other thing which is happening in most of the villages of Haryana is that the number of unmarried males is increasing. Beyond 30 years of age, many males can be seen without marriage in each village. Unemployment is increasing amongst boys and girls both .Also there seems to be increasing trend of impotency in males because of multiple factors. The purchase of bridegrooms is becoming an accepted cultural practice in most of the villages. All these factors are adding the miseries of the women in Haryana. Side by side son preference and the under-valuation of daughter manifests itself in discriminatory practices against daughters such as well being, including, premature and preventable death of female child.
The data from the National Family Health Surgery – 4 indicate that the median duration of breast feeding for girls was slightly lower (24.6 months) than the median duration of breast feeding for boys (26.4 months). A larger proportion of female children than male children were severely underweight (19/1% of girls and 16.9% of boys) and severely stunted (24.4% of girls and 21.8% of boys). Moreover female child mortality rate (1-4 years) during the ten years preceding 1998-99 was much higher (36.7 percent 1000 than male child mortality 24.9 per 1000). This deprivation in childhood contributes to substantial proportions of women being malnourished and stunted as adults. Non-pregnant women age 15-49 years who are anaemic (<12.0 g/dl) (%)--61.4% urban and 64.2 rural women.Pregnant women age 15-49 years who are anaemic (<11.0 g/dl) (%)--50.2% urban and 58.1% rural.All women age 15-49 years who are anaemic (%) --60.8% urban and 63.9 % rural .( NFHS-4-2015-2016) . For a significant proportion of adolescent Indian girls, an early marriage followed soon after by a pregnancy is the norm. The percentage of women age 25-49 years married before the age of 18 in Haryana is 20% . They have no say on sexuality and reproduction. Child bearing in adolescence affects women adversely in many ways; socially, economically, psychologically and physically. It truncates their education, limits their income-earning opportunities and burdens them with responsibilities at an age when they aught to be exploring life. In developing countries, early childhood bearing carries a greater relative risk of dying in pregnancy and delivery as compared to woman in the 20-24 age groups from around 80% to as high as 400%. maternal mortality rate has also been decreased from 127 to 101 but still on higher side. .
Senior Professor,
PGIMS, Rohtak.
Sunday, 12 July 2020
National Medical Commission Act 2019
What was the need for the Act?
- Corruption Charges Against Previous Regulator:
- The Medical Council of India (MCI), the body in charge of regulating the medical profession (before NMC Act) has faced corruption scandals.
- Further, MCI was alleged of promoting Inspector Raj (that is, inspections carried out by the MCI to ensure the maintenance of required standards by medical colleges) and the malpractices linked with it.
- In this context, the NMC Act replaced MCI with the National Medical Commission (NMC).
- The NMC Act has outlined the composition of the NMC with ex officio members, nominees of states and union territories, and from amongst persons of ability, integrity and standing.
- Urban-Rural Divide in Healthcare:
- Healthcare system in India is among the most privatized systems in the world, where most qualified doctors tend to serve in the urban areas, whereas rural areas are at the mercy of poorly functional public healthcare systems.
- In order to rectify this, the NMC may grantlimited licence to practice medicine at mid-level as Community Health Providerto such persons connected with a modern scientific medical profession who qualify such criteria as may be specified by the regulations.
- These Community Health Providers acn bridge the shortages of medical professionals in rural areas.
- Equity in Accessing Medical Education:
- Democratisation of medical education is very important as it is becoming more expensive with every passing year. With the rising fees, expensive books and equipment become a barrier for several deserving students.
- According to the Act, NMC will determine fees for 50% of the seats in private medical colleges and deemed universities.
- This move will broaden the opportunity for students from all sections of society to undertake medical education.
- Uniformity in Quality:
- The NMC Act, 2019 provides for National Exit Test (NEXT) for granting a licence to practise medicine and enrolment in the State Register or the National Register, which shall also be the basis for admission to postgraduate broad-speciality education in medical institutions.
- Similar efforts have been made by the government, for bringing uniformity in under-graduate medical entrance exams through National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET).
Associated Issues
- Audit by Third Party:
- The NMC Act proposed to set up a “Medical Assessment and Rating Board”to hire and authorise any other third-party agency or persons for carrying out inspections of medical institutions for assessing and rating such institutions.
- The authenticity of quality audits by private bodies can be questioned.
- Issue of Autonomy:
- The Act provides NMC as a complete subsidiary of the government. From the selection of its office-bearers and members to its finances, its functioning and powers, all being comprehensively controlled by the government.
- This absolute control of the government of the NMC, threatens its autonomy.
- Formalizing Quackery:
- The Act is silent on the method by which the “commission” will grant “limited licence” to community health providers to practise modern medicine.
- The absence of clarity on this front, may allow some unqualified personnel to perform duties of a medical practitioner.
- Issue of Federalism:
- Though health is primarily a state subject, the Act empowers the central government to give such directions and the state government shall comply with such directions.
Conclusion
Political: Lack of accountability; healthcare facilities not monitored regularly; policy loopholes, approach to healthcare governance not participatory and inclusive.
Economic: Low public healthcare investment and inadequate health infrastructure; high out of pocket expenses; lack of accessibility and affordability
Social: Urban-Rural, Poor-Rich Divide; gender divide; lack of awareness; poor hygiene culture and sanitation practices; lack of capacity building of health workers.
Technological: Lack of technological up-gradation, research and development.
Environmental: Severe pollution; increase in zoonotic diseases.
Legal: Lack of legal awareness. Eg- ‘informed consent of patient’; ‘negligence by medical professionals’ not covered strictly under medical jurisprudence.
Drishti Mains Question
The achievement of SDG-3 in India will need well-functioning health systems that work towards ensuring universal health coverage. Discuss.
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