Banerjee Amitav
Department of Community Medicine, Dr. DY Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre, Dr. DY Patil Vidyapeeth, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
Indian J Community Med. 2020 Jan-Mar;45(1):4-7. doi: 10.4103/ijcm.IJCM_183_19.
The development in the country's health status has not kept pace with its economic development. Although India along with most countries of the world was a signatory to the Alma Ata Declaration of 1978, its performance particularly on health equity and quality issues, so far, has been far from satisfactory. There are vast variations in health-care status by states, by ethnic groups, gender, and urban-rural difference. Till recently, government policies and people's perceptions also seemed to be on the wrong track. Our priorities seemed to be all wrong - we seemed to prefer setting up of high-cost tertiary health institutions at the expense of the primary health centers. The recently launched Swachh Bharat and Ayushman Bharat schemes offer hope of addressing these asymmetries. This paper briefly dwells on these issues.
该国健康状况的发展未能跟上其经济发展的步伐。尽管印度与世界上大多数国家一样,是1978年《阿拉木图宣言》的签署国,但到目前为止,其在健康公平和质量问题上的表现远不能令人满意。各邦、各民族、性别以及城乡之间的医疗保健状况存在巨大差异。直到最近,政府政策和民众观念似乎也走入了歧途。我们的优先事项似乎全错了——我们似乎更倾向于以牺牲初级卫生中心为代价,建立高成本的三级医疗机构。最近推出的“清洁印度”和“阿育吠陀印度”计划为解决这些不对称问题带来了希望。本文将简要阐述这些问题。