It was last October that Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz described India as the 바카라poster child of what not to do바카라 in handling the Covid-ÂindÂuced crisis, slotting the country with the US and Brazil. Six months ago, the economist바카라s sharp tone could perhaps have been brushed aside, given that things were actually looking up. The epidemic, at least, was heading the other way바카라down. But now, it would seem prophetic바카라a textbook case of how things can go horribly wrong just when they were going swimmingly well.
Or were they? And, where did this tidal wave come from and what were the signals we missed? Even as distress of an extreme variety unfolds all around us, the fact that it can happen바카라anywhere on the planet바카라is the sobering reality to anyone watching from afar. 바카라It바카라s a fragile situation globally,바카라 was how the WHO바카라s COVID-19 technical lead Maria Van Kerkhove put it this week. Yes, other countries have seen the steep epicurve that바카라s currently playing out in India바카라a near-vertical climb all of April바카라but not of this scale. You don바카라t need a graph to tell you that.
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The worst-case scenarios are projecting 8-10 lakh repÂorted cases and 5,000 deaths daily by a mid-May peak. If anything makes that grim situation even grimmer, it바카라s the way COVID-19 operates바카라in that the testing net won바카라t cover all infections even at today바카라s pace of 17 lakh tests a day. Going by past serosurveys, the Seattle-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) suggests that current case numbers need to be multiplied by 20 to get the actual number of infections. That range is vastly lower than the guesstimates around this time last year because testing has increased바카라but the sheer numbers it hints at aren바카라t. 바카라Even if the peak is reached in May, it will take a while for the cases and deaths to come down to a level where we can have confidence in resuming normal life,바카라 epidemiologist Prof Bhramar Mukherjee of the University of Michigan tweeted last week. Many states have resorted to the only speed-breaker option left바카라local lockdowns.
Indeed, a ray of hope streamed in from Maharashtra this week where the curve has been dropping for a few days, even if slightly. But witness the images from another part of the country바카라on April 27, as the world watched in disbelief at distressing visuals of patients dropping dead outside hospitals gasping for oxygen, scores of devotees were taking the last shahi snan at the Kumbh Mela. 바카라Do we need more explanation for the virus surge in tsunami proportions?바카라 asks epidemiologist Jayaprakash Muliyil, who chairs the scientific advisory committee at the National Institute of Epidemiology. 바카라Over 25 lakh people gathering at one place바카라Šwe don바카라t have calculations for this kind of situation. And then you wonder why Delhi is scrambling for oxygen.바카라 As for the other ongoing super-spreader event바카라elections바카라the Madras High Court바카라s exasperation at the Election Commission said it all: that the EC바카라s officers should probably be 바카라booked for murder바카라 with the way they handled the polls. The EC, of course, is a sort of proxy there.
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Many factors contributed to that original question: if India was reporting less than 10,000 daily cases in mid-February, how did this come to pass? Foremost among them being a disregard for Covid-appropriate behÂaviour, everyone being smug in the belief that the battle had been won. Many warning signals were ignored, says K. Srinath Reddy, president of the Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI). 바카라I have been sounding alarm bells since January that we should be careful at least till April. As a country, we prematurely declared that the pandemic was over. We belÂieved all those models that said there won바카라t be any second wave. The country was in a hurry to get back to rebuilding the economy,바카라 says Reddy. In fact, in January at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke about how the country fought the virus and proved the predictions of two million deaths by some experts wrong.


Most public health experts reckon public gestures by the political class gave a false sense of security to a citizenry only too keen to drop their guard. By end-February, the Election Commission had announced elections to five states바카라the Covid surge in Maharashtra became evident from mid-March, but that didn바카라t stop the mammoth election rallies, even when new virus mutants were being invÂestigated for faster transmission. 바카라We knew this virus is going to be around after the first wave. We knew we had to have beds and oxygen. One year바카라s hard work has gone down the drain,바카라 says virologist V. Ravi of the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, who is on a COVID-19 technical advisory panel in Karnataka. 바카라And who is being put to maximum stress? The health infrastructure and healthcare professionals. Everybody else is happily doing what they want to do.바카라 The Opposition concurs on the point of government abdication. Congress MP Adoor Prakash, a member of the parliamentary standing committee on health and family welfare, talks of a policy paralysis. 바카라The country is out of breath now. But we had flagged these issues in November 2020 itself, suggesting that the Centre accelerate oxygen production and increase hospital beds.바카라 The sequence is important. The 바카라double mutant바카라 was first detected back in October. The COVID-19 National Task Force (NTF) met in December to discuss evidence-based modifications in testing, treatment and surveillance strategies after reports emerged of the British variant washing up on Indian shores. It바카라s another matter that the NTF has been rendered a toothless body, meeting 바카라only intermittently바카라 even as the second wave was rearing its head. Mutating authorities are one thing; what about mutations in the virus itself? What it called for was aggressive genome sequencing to map the trends first. Though a genomics network of 10 labs was set up in January to ramp up sequencing, it was choked of funds, the way lakhs of patients are now thirsting for oxygen. 바카라We should be doing 10 to 20 times what we are doing right now. We need to expand genome sequencing right away. For that, the scientists need resources,바카라 says Ramanan Lakshminarayan, director, Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics and Policy.
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The spectre of failure now is in some contrast to the Âsituation last year. Look back on those early gains. When the pandemic first pervaded the Indian landmass last March, the response to it was mounted on a war footing. No less. Recall the initial crippling shortage of N95 masks바카라and how from less than a handful of suppliers, the country swung to production surpluses by June. Or how ventilators바카라whose supply was until then ruled by imports바카라came to be manufactured locally in huge numbers. All this even when the first COVID-19 wave hadn바카라t yet peaked. 바카라This time around, nobody was expecting such a huge surge despite the fact that some of us have been warning from November that the second wave will be worse,바카라 says Dr Ravi.


What could be worse than what we are witnessing now? Bodies piling up outside crematoriums. A tsunami of desperate cries for help on social media. Social actors trying to meet the desperate shortage of oxygen and medicines that State inaction left India with. Page after page of obituaries in local newspapers. Widespread talk of disregard for data, even its manipulation바카라Haryana CM M.L. Khattar offered a real chestnut here when he said on camera: 바카라Why must we count the dead? They will not come back to life.바카라 And that policy paralysis바카라Adoor Prakash talks of the bane of 바카라unilateral decision-making, from last year바카라s lockdown onwÂards바카라, and cites how a Health Standing Committee session on April 9 was postponed. And lastly, international opprobrium for a government that바카라s responding with a predictably thin skin, writing indignant letters to foreign newspapers, banning tweets that show it in a bad light, even filing cases against those who issued public appeals for oxygen simply because that belied their wafer-thin claims of normalcy.
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What could be worse? Well, there could be a third wave later this year. Dr Ravi certainly reckons so. And Bhramar Mukherjee바카라s projection of a mid-May peak, with 8-10 lakh cases daily, is only the crest of the present one. What will happen if this form-shifting, flux-ridden salad bowl of mutant Covid viruses moves like a swarm of locusts into the hinterland where there바카라s no healthcare at all, into India바카라s vast landscape of congested small towns and qasbas? What happens if the present nightmare is multiplied ten-fold? That바카라s the scenario India must thwart at all costs.
The one weapon we have is vaccination: that rollout needs to be hastened to cover as many people as possible any which way, on a super-urgent basis. Britain, for insÂtance, does meticulous surge planning: it anticipates a surge in August, and has covered all the bases possible so as to master the ball, especially through a calibrated바카라and, free바카라vaccination (). Dr Ravi sounds a note of dire warning on India바카라s potential winter apocalypse: 바카라All those who cannot receive the vaccine by November will be the susceptible pool, if we continue what we are doing now.바카라 Muliyil feels the deaths can be prevented only if the government targets more people above 60 years of age. 바카라There wasn바카라t enough vaccine to give all the people above 45 years. Now they want to give it to younger people,바카라 he says. 바카라This is not sensible because the mortality difference between these groups is huge. The little vaccine we have should have been sensibly used.바카라 India has opened the door for vaccines available globally, which should see more supply coming in. It바카라s another matter that policies on vaccine procurement, supplies and cost have triggered a separate debate. Cost, especially, has touched a real raw nerve바카라with allegations of doom profiteering flying against the private manufacturers and a seemingly facilitating government. In India, as elsewhere, life and death are political. They are also economic. And everyone바카라s alrÂeady paying the cost. That cost must not escalate.
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Big private hospitals ought to have anticipated the oxygen crunch, but were not proactive.
The Oximeter Reads Red
Everyone knows India is gasping for oxygen. But what바카라s the real situation, in infrastructural terms? Well, perversely enough, it seems India actually went from breathing normally to near-asphyxiation. Breathing is an involuntary bodily function, but at the country level, in times of a scarcity that could have been anticipated, it needed volitional will. Back in September 2020, when Covid cases had crossed the first peak and were gradually waning, the chemical and fertilisers ministry바카라in a gazette notification on regulating prices of liquid oxygen바카라pointed to an uptake in oxygen cylinders. Delivery through cylinders, it said, had 바카라increased from 11 per cent pre-Covid to 50 per cent of current oxygen supply바카라. The same month, the Centre also formed a dedicated control room for oxygen supply.
The big picture first. India바카라s oxygen producing capacity is 7,127 metric tonnes (MT). Between April 12 and 24, as the second wave broke upon us with tsunamic suddenness, India바카라s medical oxygen demand nearly doubled from 3,842 MT to 6,785 MT바카라nearly touching that total capacity. But even that could have been met with India바카라s own resources. The challenge was transportation. 바카라Most of India바카라s oxygen production is in the East and transporting it across India is the biggest challenge,바카라 says Piyush Goyal, additional secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs. This involves ferrying the oxygen 1,000-2,000 km to destinations of peak demand. 바카라Air Force planes have been depÂloyed to lift empty tankers to the oxygen-refilling states and have reduced the turn-back time from four-five days to two hours. But we can바카라t transport filled oxygen cylinders due to technical reasons.바카라
At present, India has around 1,200 oxygen cryogenic tankers for road transport바카라now, the government has also diverted nitrogen and argon tankers to transport oxygen. A cryogenic tanker costs around Rs 35-40 lakh, an oxygen cylinder costs around Rs 10,000, while an oxygen refill costs Rs 300-500 depending on the region. Logistics, which congealed into bottlenecks in the present crisis, has been a stated focus of the Modi government since 2016-17. Every budget has spoken about the National Logistics Policy. But a roadmap isn바카라t out yet, despite a separate logistics department being formed in the commerce Âministry in 2017.
On April 24, the Centre decided to take over liquid oxygen distribution, setting a price of Rs 11,000 per tonne, allocating quotas for every state and firming up a distribution plan with oxyÂgen and steel manufacturers바카라also as a response to open market sales where, reports say, prices were as high as Rs 18,000 per tonne.


India바카라s leading oxygen manufacturers include Linde India, Goyal MG Gases, National Oxygen Limited and Taiyo Nippon Sanso Corporation. Now, even steel companies, the biggest users and manufacturers of industrial liquid oxygen, have pitched in. 바카라We are ready to compromise steel production to increase oxygen supply capacity, we believe in people-first,바카라 says Jindal Steel and Power Limited MD V.R. Sharma. The company is providing 132 tonnes of oxygen daily from its two plants at Raigarh in Chhattisgarh and Angul in Odisha.


So the government took its eyes off a moving ball, and is now trying desperately to swat its bat to earn some runs. But even big private hospitals haven바카라t been proactive. They should have known what was coming. Why didn바카라t they incÂrease their own oxygen capacity? Set up captive plants? Well, simply because a supply of 10 litres of oxygen per minute costs a minimum of Rs 15-20 lakh of investment. A senior doctor, on condition of anonymity, concedes hospitals balked at that cost. Besides, there were practical difficulties. 바카라You require space, manpower and quality managers to run oxygen plants. Till now, the arrangement has been that the oxygen suppliers generally instal their own tanks and sometimes even provide manpower to supply oxygen through cylinders or pipeline networks connected to the tank.바카라 Few have thought about a more self-sufficient model, he admits.


A flood of obituaries in Rajkot바카라s Sandesh newspaper points to the scale of loss.
Shouldn바카라t they have been, during a pandemic? Some don바카라t agree. 바카라A hospital바카라s primary work is to provide healthcare services,바카라 says Dr Praneet Kumar, a healthcare consultant who has helped set up several hospitals. 바카라They can바카라t be channelising funds and energy for industrial work like producing liquid oxygen.바카라 Even so, they do partner in India바카라s overall healthcare system, and have a role. In a recent affidavit to the Delhi High Court, the health ministry stated that 162 Pressure Swing Adsorption (PSA) plants were sanctioned under PMCares바카라with the arrangement that the government pays for installation, while the centralised pipeline would be set up and paid for by hospitals. But alas, complacency set in. The momentum petered out as Covid numbers seemed in control. Only 33 PSA plants have been installed so far. That바카라s one argument for decentralised planning (). Kerala set up an oxygen plant in October. Himachal Pradesh too is self-sufficient. Both now offer to supply their surplus to neighbours. The rest are choking on hot air.
Going Viral, In a Billion Ways?
This is a clinical whodunit. Is the COVID-19 virus ÂacqÂuiring new ninja-like skills바카라moving more nimbly, stealthily, and attacking at will? Can it shift form to Âbecome more infectious or escape antibodies? The answer can only come from continuous genomic sequencing of Âinfected samples. What is that analysis telling us about the epidemic in India?
That there are a handful of variants in circulation. One of them is the B.1.617 variant, first reported in India and known better by the misnomer 바카라double mutant바카라. This was first seen in Maharashtra, and now in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and 14 other states바카라growing with a kind of radiating fury. There바카라s a related second variant called B.1.618, seen in samples in West Bengal. Then, the B.1.1.7 or the UK variant that바카라s primarily behind the spread in Punjab. Besides this, smaller numbers of the B.1.351, or the South African variant.


A queue of bodies of Covid victims outside a Delhi crematorium.
That scenario is still unfolding, Sujeet Kumar Singh, dirÂector, National Centre for Disease Control, said at a public webinar last week. While B.1.617 was found in proportions of over 50 per cent in many cities in Maharashtra, B.1.1.7 was catching up in Delhi. 바카라From 28 per cent of the UK variant in the second week of March, it rose to 50 per cent in the last week. If we observe the surge in Delhi, I think it dirÂectly correlates to the type of variant.바카라
A bit about virus mutations. Changes to the virus바카라s structure take place all the time, possibly every time a virus replicates its genetic material inside the host. Indeed, the first 6,000 genomes of Indian isolates showed no less than 7,000 variants, as Rakesh Mishra, director, Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), explains. 바카라That바카라s how it evolves, it바카라s very normal.바카라 Most mutations are random and meaningless바카라only the ones that accidentally end up causing trouble matter. Here again, some detail to clear the air바카라the Indian double and triple mutants are actually the same variant, B.1.167. The third mutation was flagged subsequently. One of its mutations was first seen in California amid a spike in cases there.
The first sequences of B.1.617 were seen in December, but cases were declining then, explains Anurag Agrawal, Âdirector, Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology, at the webinar hosted by the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomics Consortium (INSACOG), a network of sequencing labs that India put together in December to track the virus바카라s spread. By end-March, B.1.617 moved from being a 바카라Variant of Interest바카라 closer to a 바카라Variant of Concern바카라바카라the latter term refers to an ability to spread faster, dodge the immune resÂponse and/or cause severe disease. It will still take a couple of weeks to get an exact fix on B.1.617바카라how fast it is spreading or replacing other variants. It바카라s much the same story world over. A strain gets tagged by the country that Âidentifies it, so it doesn바카라t necessarily imply country of Âorigin. 바카라Today, we have an Indian strain because we Âsequenced it,바카라 notes Agrawal.


Healthcare professionals desperately try to revive a patient in a hospital.
But India바카라s sequencing effort needs a serious ramp-up. Till last week, we had sequenced about 15,133 genomes바카라compare that with over 3 lakh entries shared by the UK and US, about 8 and 1 per cent of their total Covid cases. The INSACOG has set a target of sequencing 5 per cent of Âpositive cases. But given the soaring graph of new Âinfections, that is going to be a near-impossible ask. More infections naturally provide more scope for mutations. That said, the SARS-CoV-2 virus is known to change more slowly than the HIV or influenza viruses. 바카라The general trend,바카라 as Agrawal explains, 바카라is viruses become more Âinfective through mutations, but less severe over a period of time. And that바카라s what will happen eventually.바카라 The Ârationale for this, as experts say, is that the virus actually has little interest in killing its host. 바카라In fact, if the host lives, meets many people, is totally asymptomatic and infects as many people as possible, the virus actually propagates Âbetter,바카라 explains Agrawal.
The good news: early studies indicate that both Covishield and Covaxin offer protection against B.1.617. 바카라Sequencing is essential to know if we are able to get a monster out or if we have a new variant for which none of the vaccines will give immunity,바카라 says virologist V. Ravi. 바카라That kind of mutant has not emerged anywhere in the world yet. But unless we keep policing, we won바카라t catch such a variant.바카라
That vigil must be eternal. Meanwhile, the basics on the ground don바카라t change, says Dr Ravi. 바카라A zillion variants may come, but none of them will pass through the mask more ÂeffÂiciently than their predecessors. How we control the third wave will depend on how we behave. We have been abysmal in behaviour change communication, and communication alone is not enough.바카라 Srinath Reddy of PHFI agrees. 바카라We flouted every single public health rule that should have been followed,바카라 he says. 바카라We gave an open road for the virus to travel and variants also came in with a faster rate of Âtransmission. I would say the variants are only partly Âresponsible for the current crisis. They increased the rate of spread. But the spread would have happened even with the original virus.바카라 The second waves in most countries were typically a sharp spike and fall, say epidemiologists. But, as they warn, there could be others to follow before the virus settles in and becomes a humdrum endemic thing. Yes, we need both eyes on the burning building right now. But we also need a wary third eye on the future.
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Death Climbs The Hills
From 318 active cases on March 1 to over 14,000바카라where did the tourism magnet lose the plot?
Sobs rend the air as bodies wrapped in plastic are loaded into vans outside the Covid wards at Shimla바카라s Indira Gandhi Medical College and Hospital, Himachal Pradesh바카라s biggest healthcare institution. Some of the bodies are of people from far-off villages, with no kin around during their last journey. The scene is no different at Dr Rajendra Prasad Medical College in Kangra district, where 10 to 12 Âpeople are dying of Covid every day. The district has seen more than 300 Covid deaths so far. Only 8 per cent of Covid patients in the hill state have been hospitalised, with the rest kept in home isolation. The two prime hospitals in Himachal have a combined bed capacity of 270, and as that is far short of the growing demand, CM Jai Ram Thakur of the ruling BJP recently made arrangements for 1,000 beds at a site in Dharamshala owned by the Radha Soami Trust, a religious Âorganisation. 바카라With the number of cases rising, we need more ambulances, beds with oxygen facilities, doctors and Âparamedics immediately,바카라 says Kangra deputy commissioner Rakesh Prajapati.
The surge in Covid cases is surprising in a state where 90 per cent of the population lives in villages in the hills and Âvalleys, cut off from densely populated cities like Shimla. 바카라There is a complete collapse of governance and the decision-Âmaking process amid misplaced priorities,바카라 says Mukesh Agnihotri, leader of the Opposition in the Himachal assembly. 바카라After the number of cases dropped and unlocking was announced, the CM shifted to election mode and forgot about plans to enhance bed capacity, set up makeshift Âhospitals and recruit doctors and other medical staff. That바카라s why Himachal was caught unprepared when the second wave hit the state.바카라 Plans to set up oxygen plants, including one for Deen Dayal Upadhyay Hospital in the heart of Shimla, slid down the priority scale when the first wave subsided, while polls for panchayats and urban civic bodies, political rallies and Maha Shivratri celebrations contributed to the Âresurgence of Covid. In fact, the CM had invited PM Narendra Modi to the Himachal Day function on April 15 and a 바카라rath yatra바카라 was planned to mark 50 years of the formation of the state. The plan was cancelled only after the spike in cases. Until then, the focus was on unlocking every activity, opening schools, allowing mega weddings and social or religious events, throwing open the state borders for unrestricted Âmobility바카라Ševen as Covid testing facilities were reduced by Âalmost 80 per cent. It will soon be peak summer, when Himachal attracts tourists in large numbers. But this year the hotels are shut and the markets deserted.
바카라Ashwani Sharma in Shimla
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All It Takes Is Will
Proper planning and proactive action can stop spread of the virus, as Dhule district shows
Around mid-2020, Dhule district in Maharashtra had turned into a coronavirus hotspot when local residents came in contact with Covid-positive migrant workers passing through the region on their way back home from the state during the first nationwide lockdown. The situation was, however, quickly brought under control. Cut to 2021. As the second wave of the pandemic rolled through the western state, afflicting millions and killing hundreds, Dhule once again bore the brunt of the viral Âinfections. Dhule, though, is not a story of despair, but of hope. It바카라s also the story of a proactive administration taking control of the situation as fast as it had sunk. In Covid-ravaged Maharashtra, Dhule is the feel-good story.
Since March this year, when positivity rate was as high as 25 per cent and daily cases rising to 5,000, Dhule has turned things around바카라positivity is below 10 per cent and in daily numbers falling to 400-500. Officials attribute the turnaround to the administration broadening the base of people being tracked and tested by trained workers going door-to-door. Many are also coming to primary health Âcentres for screening. 바카라We are still grappling with Covid, but we are now seeing some encouraging results with the percentage of positive cases going down. We are also now in a position to help our neighbouring districts like Malegaon and Nandurbar,바카라 says Dhule collector Sanjay Yadav. To go with the recovery rate of around 88 per cent, the administration is targeting to bring down positive cases to below five per cent.
The official attributes the success to his team of Âadministrators and medical experts, who had warned of a possible second wave and helped bolster infrastructure beforehand. Besides daily review meetings, the Âadministration is ensuring prompt disbursement of Âresources to the 61 hospitals and two medical colleges in the district managing Covid cases. Teams coordinating Âoxygen and medicine supply are also active around the clock. He adds that efforts are on to ensure oxygen buffer stocks for 24 hours to prevent any supply disruption though the district has no oxygen plant.
바카라Monitoring, containment zone implementation and the three Ts바카라tracking, testing and treatment바카라are the reason for the success in Dhule,바카라 says Radhakrishna Game, Âdivisional commissioner, Nashik. Game oversees five Âdistricts out of which Dhule and Jalgaon are doing well in Covid management.
바카라Lola Nayar
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Footing The Bills
For decades, India has invested little in healthcare. The results show up as a festering sore.
India, a country of 1.3 billion people. has 0.55 beds per 1,000 population, data from the National Health Profile show. There is more. The country also has 22 health workers per 1,000 people, against the WHO Ârecommendation of 44. The aveÂrage GDP spending on the health sector in India is a meagre 1 per cent. Ironically, even after 73 years of independence, nearly 70 per cent of expenditure on health is borne by Âpatients, forcing 60 million Indians into Âpoverty each year, accÂording to Finance Commission estimates.
India Health Infra
- 0.55/1,000 0.55 beds per 1,000 peopl
- 22/1,000 22 health workers per 1,000 people, as against the WHO norm of 44:1,000
- 1:1,511 Doctor to population ratio in India is 1:1,511, as against the WHO norm of 1:1,000
- 1:670 Nurse to population ratio is 1:670, against the norm of 1:300
India is estimated to have a total of 18,99,228 hospital beds바카라over 60 per cent of which are in the private sector. This is much lower than in other Âcountries: China바카라s bed density exceeds four per 1,000; Sri Lanka, the United Kingdom and the United States have around three per 1,000; and in Thailand and Brazil, hospital beds exceed two per 1,000 people.
Within India, hospital bed densities are particularly low in Bihar, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Manipur, Madhya Pradesh and Assam. Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Haryana and Telangana have Ârelatively low densities of public hospital beds, but this is made up by the Âavailability of private beds.
Health sector experts agree that the health sector in India has been underfunded for decades. Today, 70 per cent of funding for the health sector is from states, while the Centre provides the reÂmÂaining. In 1992-93, health expenditure was 1.01 per cent of GDP, but reduced to 0.99 per cent in 2003-04. It came further down to 0.91 per cent in 2015-16, a year after the Modi government took over. And this year it바카라s around 1.26 per cent of GDP, as per the Union Budget 2021-22.
A senior government official on condition of anonymity says that the health ministry in a submission to a parliamentary Âcommittee had projected the demand for the five-year period from 2021-22 to 2025-26 at Rs 6.16 lakh crore. This demand has been spread over some very crucial Âaspects of the health sector, like setting up of medical colleges, NHM, post-Covid health sector reforms etc. 바카라But where is the money and who will foot the bills?바카라 he asks, adding that the private sector won바카라t come forward for public good and CSR funds alone won바카라t be enough.
Till September 2020, only Rs 7,822 crore was spent by India Inc and PSUs on CSR. In 2017-18, the spending was Rs 13,889 crore, which rose to Rs 18,654 crore for 2018-19. Out of this, allocation for the healthcare sector was Rs 2,210 crore,
Rs 3,216 crore and Rs 1,048 crore for the years 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20, respectively.
A Niti Aayog official on condition of Âanonymity says, 바카라The government is working on a legislation to make it Âmandatory for both private and public sector to deposit their CSR funds in a Âcentral government kitty, and the Centre will Âdecide where to spend the money accÂording to its priorities.바카라 He adds that with the pandemic experience and PMCares Fund, the idea has even more support, with whispers in the government Âcorridors that the legislation will have a more targeted approach.
바카라Jyotika Sood