Health Insurance in India: Growth, Risks, and the Road to UHC

Health Insurance in India: Growth, Risks, and the Road to UHC


Context:

  • Universal Health Care (UHC), envisioned by the Bhore Committee (1946), remains largely unrealised in India even after eight decades.
  • Health insurance schemes like the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) and State Health Insurance Programmes (SHIPs) have expanded formal coverage to over 80% of the population.
  • However, these insurance-driven models raise questions about equity, sustainability, and the long-term future of public health infrastructure.

1. Growth of Health Insurance in India:

  • PMJAY (2018): Provides ₹5 lakh coverage per household per year for inpatient care, covering 58.8 crore individuals (2023–24).
  • State Health Insurance Programmes (SHIPs): Most states run parallel programmes, collectively covering a similar population with budgets around ₹16,000 crore.
  • Combined Expenditure: Total annual spending on PMJAY and SHIPs is approximately ₹28,000 crore, growing at 8–25% in real terms (2018–2024).
  • Coverage vs Utilisation: Despite extensive coverage, only 35% of insured hospital patients utilised these schemes (HCES 2022–23).

2. Key Fault Lines in Health Insurance Expansion:

a. For-Profit Medicine Bias:

  • Nearly two-thirds of PMJAY funds go to private hospitals, reinforcing commercialised healthcare.
  • Weak regulation leads to overcharging, unnecessary procedures, and ethical compromises.

b. Neglect of Primary Care:

  • Insurance funding is skewed towards hospitalisation, leaving primary and preventive services underfunded.
  • Rising tertiary care costs risk crowding out rural PHCs and OPD services, especially with an ageing population.

c. Utilisation Challenges:

  • Awareness gaps: Many beneficiaries do not know how to use coverage.
  • Private hospital reluctance: Low reimbursement rates discourage treating insured patients.
  • Marginalised groups face greater barriers.

d. Discrimination in Care:

  • Public hospitals often prioritise insured patients for extra funds.
  • Private hospitals prefer uninsured patients, as billing generates higher revenue.
  • Results in inequity within the healthcare system.

e. Financial Sustainability & Provider Exit:

  • Pending PMJAY dues exceed ₹12,161 crore, surpassing the annual budget.
  • Over 600 hospitals have exited PMJAY due to reimbursement delays.

f. Fraud & Corruption:

  • 3,200 hospitals flagged for fraud (ghost patients, inflated bills, unnecessary surgeries).
  • Weak audits and opaque scheme portals worsen misuse.

3. Structural Risks for UHC:

  • Underfunded Public Health: Public expenditure on health is 1.3% of GDP (2022) vs global average of 6.1%.
  • Profit-Driven System: Insurance schemes strengthen private sector dominance without improving quality.
  • Exclusionary Tendencies: Despite high coverage, out-of-pocket expenditure remains among the highest globally.

4. International Comparisons:

  • Thailand, Canada: Social health insurance integrated within UHC is non-profit, universally accessible, and strongly regulated.
  • India: Insurance is targeted, profit-oriented, and poorly regulated, differing significantly from successful international models.

5. Policy Way Forward:

a. Strengthen Public Health Infrastructure:

  • Expand primary health centres, diagnostics, OPD services, and rural health workforce.
  • Prioritise preventive care over hospitalisation-focused funding.

b. Regulate the Private Sector:

  • Enforce standard treatment protocols, price caps, and monitoring of empanelled hospitals.

c. Improve Utilisation & Awareness:

  • Launch community outreach and digital literacy programmes.
  • Simplify claims processing and strengthen grievance redressal.

d. Ensure Financial Sustainability:

  • Guarantee timely reimbursements and consider direct budgetary allocations over insurance intermediaries.

e. Move Towards True UHC:

  • Raise public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP (National Health Policy 2017 target).
  • Transition from insurance-driven patchwork to publicly funded, universally accessible healthcare.

Conclusion:

  • Schemes like PMJAY and SHIPs provide temporary relief but risk institutionalising a profit-driven, hospitalisation-heavy system.
  • True UHC requires:
    • Robust public investment in primary care
    • Regulation of private providers
    • Equity-focused reforms
  • Without these measures, health insurance remains a painkiller, not a cure, for India’s ailing healthcare system.

Source : The Hindu

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