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Time and again, critics do not hesitate in drawing attention to the poor quality of healthcare and the lack of a social health safety net as the failure of the government. It is also frequently heard that the Indian health system must rapidly adapt to a new order, but what is that order of things, we struggle to define.
Around the world, there have been plenty of proposals for curing what ails healthcare. All aim to tackle a universal challenge: improving the quality of healthcare and reducing, or at least curbing, its soaring cost. But regardless of what happens to the many experiments and reform efforts, the reality is that the basic structure of the healthcare system in India and most other countries will remain in place for the foreseeable future. The only realistic hope for substantially improving healthcare is for us to launch a revolution from within. The more responsible we are as individual citizens, the better we would be in healthcare financing.
The recently promulgated reforms of the US healthcare system have an early warning for us in India. The health insurance legislation passed by the US Congress and signed by President Obama may not be perfect, but democracy is often about the art of the possible. Making health insurance compulsory for all Americans and placing penalties on those who do not purchase it is a move that Indian government too should think about seriously. Subsidising the cost of providing health insurance for SMEs and allowing them to participate in larger 'pools' to increase buying power, while penalising them if cover is not provided is a model that India should consider emulating in some measure.
The US healthcare system has been working on a three tier system where the government provides medicare to poor and medicaid to senior citizens. Others are mainly covered via corporate plans from their employers, with an opportunity to top-up and/or choose additional benefits. This obviously was not good enough as it left about 32 million Americans uninsured either because of unemployment or because their existing insurance policies were insufficient to cover the gap. Add to all these, the cost of medical treatment in the US is perhaps the highest in the world. The new legislation will certainly create greater inclusiveness in healthcare. The 32 million Americans uninsured will now have access and those who could not access healthcare because of pre existing conditions can no longer be excluded. We can foresee a similar fate in India sooner than later with rising corporatisation of healthcare, new technologies making their way to our shores and an urbanising population beset by a sedentary lifestyle and new diseases.
The US experience provides definitive proof that health insurance is the best way to finance rising healthcare costs. Quick steps therefore need to be taken to encourage and mandate taking up of health insurance by all who are above the poverty level. Early adoption of employer provided health insurance as the 'aggregation point' and provision of tax incentives to employers who provide and employees who take health insurance seems logically rational steps in the right direction.
What's particularly noteworthy is President Obama's foresight to regulate the insurance industry and bring in place standard wording and policies while reducing /limiting exclusions. This will ensure that everybody has a level-playing field.
The proposed insurance 'exchange' to allow free market forces to drive the most competitive rates within the framework of the government mandated plan; and limiting the profits of the health insurance companies and redirecting surplus profits back to the policyholder to keep a check on insurance rates should help boost the sector in a big way. It's time for health insurance to be recognised as a speciality field of business with its own set of rules and regulations in India as well. Standardisation in terms and conditions of health insurance policies to improve transparency and un-complicating clauses is the way to go. By taking pro-active measures now, the Indian government can avoid the inevitable situation when it is forced to take the same harsh steps that have been adopted by the US government after decades of inaction.
Source: http://epaper.timesofindia.com/
SEBI registration no. : ARN-113510
Expiry : 3rd AUG 2025
IRDA license no. : IMF186644360120180192
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