1 / 30

Health equity: The Indian Context

Health equity: The Indian Context. Subodh S Gupta. Health Indicators among selected countries. National averages often mask substantially worse outcomes for many disadvantaged groups of population. Infant Mortality Rate according to wealth quintiles.

vielka-diaz
Download Presentation

Health equity: The Indian Context

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Health equity: The Indian Context Subodh S Gupta

  2. Health Indicators among selected countries

  3. National averages often mask substantially worse outcomes for many disadvantaged groups of population

  4. Infant Mortality Rate according to wealth quintiles

  5. Infant Mortality Rate in different states according to wealth quintiles

  6. Framework for identifying pathways leading to health inequities

  7. Introduction • The political economy context • The organisational structure and delivery mechanism • Health financing mechanisms • Coverage patterns • Current status of health and health care

  8. Per Capita Gross Domestic Product (PPP)

  9. Percent population below poverty line (GOI data)

  10. The Political Economy Context • Second most populous country • A democratic federal structure; subdivided into states and Uts; further into districts • Local levels of governance (Panchayat Raj) • Health – a state subject

  11. Alapuzzha in Kerala Vs. Kishanganj in Bihar

  12. Characteristics of Indian Health System • Complex mixed health system - Tax based health finance system with small health insurance sector - Publicly financed government health system - Fee-levying private health sector

  13. Health Expenditure in India

  14. Sources of Health Care Financing in Different Countries

  15. Financial Protection in Health • Individuals should be able to access health care when they need it and not be prevented from doing so by excessive cost. • When they do access health care, they should not incur costs that prevent them from obtaining other basic household necessities such as food, education and shelter.

  16. Catastrophic Health Expenditure • If health expenditures exceed a certain percentage of household income or capacity to pay, and therefore drive a household into poverty or prevent a household from buying other essential items including food and education. • Twelve percent of households have catastrophic health expenditure. • About a third of poor households have catastrophic health expenditure. • Impoverishment due to catastrophic health expenditure is higher (about half) among middle economic status households.

  17. Percent of Households Compromising or Postponing Consumption Decisions after Seeking Inpatient Care(3 Districts, West Bengal)

  18. Relative Share of Sources of Financing to Pay for Inpatient Care(3 Districts, West Bengal)

  19. Percent of Rural Persons with an Illness who could not Seek Treatment due to Financial Constraints, by Economic Quintile(3 districts, West Bengal)

  20. Effect of Economic Reforms on Public Health • Increasing unregulated privatisation with little accountability to patients • Systematic deregulation of drug prices resulting in skyrocketing prices of drugs • Selective intervention approach instead comprehensive primary health care

  21. Health Inequity in outcomes • Rural/ Urban/ Urban (slum) • Inter/ Intra state • Socio-economic status • Gender • Caste • Religion

  22. Coverage with health services according to wealth quintile

  23. U5 Mortality Rate in different states according to wealth quintiles

  24. Underweight by Wealth Quintiles Percent

  25. Undernutrition in Children under Age 5 INDIA Poor nutrition contributes to 54% of deaths under age 5 Percent

  26. Trend data provides strong evidence of declines in the sex ratio of the population age 0-6 and the sex ratio at birth…. …females are under-represented among births and over-represented among births that die.

  27. After the first month of life, girls are more likely to die than boys: The child mortality rate is 61% higher for girls than for boys.

  28. The three different levels of government action • First Level: The Macro LevelThe level of the government's national budget. Here, the major concern will be the amount of resources allocated to health, but an important secondary concern will be the possible reallocations of budgets to reach poor people better. • Second Level: The Health System LevelHere, the concern will be to put together reforms and improve incentives to get the system to function better for poor people. • Third Level: The Micro LevelThe service delivery level, where the focus will be on how to implement specific activities to reach poor people. Work at these three levels is interdependent

  29. Health Financing • Pricing policies that reduce and/or eliminate user fees for basic services; • Cross-subsidization of health services that benefit the poor; • Strengthening exemption mechanisms services; • Expanding social insurance to cover informal sector workers; • Developing community-financing arrangements; • Developing equity funds to pay for the poor

  30. Thank you Achieving health equity within a generation is possible. It is the right thing to do, and now is the right time to do it. - Commission on Social Determinants of Health

More Related