Posts Tagged 'PHARMA'

India needs to make major strides on health front: UNICEF

India needs to make major strides on health front: UNICEF
5 Aug, 2008, 1810 hrs IST, IANS

NEW DELHI: India and China need to make strides on the health front to help the world achieve the millennium development goals (MDGs), UNICEF said on Tuesday in a fresh report.

The report ‘State of the Asia Pacific’s Children Report 2008′, said: “It is a fundamental truth that unless India achieves major improvements in health, nutrition, water and sanitation, education, gender equality and child protection, global efforts to reach the MDGs will fail.”

China too needs to make significant strides to regain early progress it made in child survival. “Global achievement of the health related MDGs depends largely on India’s success and on China accelerating progress even further,” the report mentions.

Without improved health care, 13 of the Asia-Pacific countries will struggle to reduce their child mortality and maternal mortality rates by two-thirds, a target that the UN has marked as health MDG.

At least 2.5 million child deaths occur in these two countries every year – accounting for nearly a third of all child deaths in the world. While 2.1 million children die in India every year, the number is 415,000 in China.
In India, the maternal mortality rate too is very high with at least 301 mothers out of every 100,000 dying during childbirth.

The report, however, mentions that the region’s robust economic growth, the fastest in the world since 1990, has lifted millions out of poverty. Child survival, regarded by Unicef as a key test of a nation’s progress in human development and child rights, has improved considerably.

“But gains have been overshadowed by deepening disparities, which means that health care often fails to reach the poorest.” The report underscores a disturbing trend across the region – public health expenditure remains well below the world average of 5.1 percent of the GDP.

While South Asia including India spends only 1.1 percent of GDP on health, it is 1.9 percent in the rest of Asia-Pacific. In addition, as more services within countries are privatised and the government share of health budget diminishes, public facilities become more run down and health workers leave for better-paid jobs in the private sector or outside the country.

“The divide between rich and poor is rising at a troubling rate within sub-regions of Asia-Pacific, leaving vast numbers of mothers and children at risk of increasing relative poverty and continued exclusion from quality primary health-care services,” the report says.

Pneumonia, diarrhoea and malnutrition are the major causes of child death in the region. But vast inequities in income, geography, gender and ethnicity are essentially what stand in the way of children surviving and thriving.
While taking note of the low prevalence of baby birth in hospitals, underweight mothers are making the situation more complicated.

“In India one out of every three women is underweight putting them at risk of having low birth weight babies, and these babies are 20 times more likely to die in infancy than healthy babies.”

As the world has moved past the half way mark and into the final lap towards the MDGs with a 2015 deadline, what is needed now is political will and sound strategies to dramatically increase investment in public health services that specifically target the poorest and most marginalised, it said.

Without improved health care, 13 of the Asia-Pacific countries will struggle to reduce the child mortality rates by two-thirds, a target that the UN has marked as health MDG.

The UNICEF said in the report that countries like India must increase their public health expenditure by two more percent of the GDP to boost healthcare facilities for the poor and underprivileged.

Govt may allow private players to set up medical colleges

Govt may allow private players to set up medical colleges
8 Aug, 2008, 0026 hrs IST,

NEW DELHI: In a move aimed at bridging healthcare needs, the government is planning to allow private healthcare players and profit-making bodies to set up medical colleges. The government may also relax the existing regulations to facilitate their entry.

Speaking at a FICCI healthcare event, health secretary Naresh Dayal said: “The government had decided to allow corporate entities to set up medical colleges, for which land acquisition norms will be relaxed. The government will also encourage public-private partnerships with government hospitals in fostering healthcare.”

At present, there are strict guidelines issued by the Medical Council of India, Indian Nursing Council, Indian Dental Council and Indian Pharmacology Council. One of these guidelines states that only the government or a non-profit body can set up a medical education centre.

The move could benefit major healthcare players such as Fortis Healthcare, Apollo Hospitals and Hinduja Group, who have chalked out ambitious plans to set up medical education hubs. Fortis alone plans to set up 10 medicities, each costing around Rs 800 crore.

Currently, India has 0.86 beds for every thousand patients, one of the lowest in the world, according to an Ernst & Young report. According to the Planning Commission report, India was short by six lakh doctors, 10 lakh nurses and two lakh dental surgeons in 2007.

Deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, said one of the ways to fill this shaft is to leverage the existing infrastructure of public sector through the public-private partnership (PPP). “PPP will improve the healthcare services by bringing competition and efficiency in government hospitals,” he said.

The government also expects to complete the roll out of the Rajiv Arogya Sri, a health insurance programme for the poor in the next 3-4 years. When completed, the programme will cover $300 million people below the poverty line (BPL) in the country.

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