Jitendra Singh calls for Make in India health module

NEW DELHI:  Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER) Minister Jitendra Singh today  called for establishing a ”Make in India” health module to meet the changing health needs of 21st century  India.

Addressing the CII Health Conference organised by Confederation of Indian Industry here, he described  the emergence of private sector as an inevitable phenomenon and stressed that for a heterogeneous country  like India, public sector healthcare was still much relevant and therefore,  a healthy synergism between  public sector and private sector healthcare agencies was needed.

Speaking on the ”Make in India” health module, he said this module can be ”based on public-private  partnership as well as multi-centric healthcare collaboration to meet the changing health needs of 21st  century India.”

He cited from his experience in the Northeast where he had motivated some of the country’s leading  corporate sector hospital groups to set up healthcare outlets of different magnitudes depending on  the viability of the location, in the form of OPD clinics or diagnostic centres or even full fledged hospitals.

Referring to the constraints of heterogeneity and diversity, Dr Singh mentioned topographical  and geographical variations in different regions of India. On the vast expanses of inaccessible areas  in the North East where he had proposed the introduction of Helicopter Care Service in the form of  Air Clinics wherein specialist doctor could fly to remote areas to hold the OPD and on way back, could  also carry some needy patients requiring hospitalisation.

The same concept, he said, could also be applied to hill states like Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

Averring that Indian society, as a whole, was fast evolving and at the same time, in recent years,  India too had become a part of shrunken global world and this phenomenon was impacting every  sphere of life including the healthcare system.

While on the one hand, disorders like diabetes and heart disease, which were hitherto confined to  urban population, are now also on the rise in rural areas, on the other hand, the access to modern  modalities of treatment is confined only to cities and big towns, as a result of which 70% of rural  population gets access only to 1/3rd of country’s hospitalisation facilities and over 600 million  people in the country are deprived of access to affordable healthcare, he added, an official release  here said.

(AGENCIES)