Details

Universalising Healthcare in India


Universalising Healthcare in India

From Care to Coverage

von: Imrana Qadeer, K. B. Saxena, P. M. Arathi

CHF 177.00

Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 20.10.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9789811658723
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 401

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Beschreibungen

This book provides a comprehensive overview of universal health coverage in India. It starts by setting the historical context and politics of the debates around universal health coverage (UHC) in India and proceeds to analyze the present crisis of public health in the country. The book examines the present policies on the pharmaceutical industry, missing links in universalizing health, and the importance of social determinants of health. It is divided into five sections, and some of the topics covered include the difference between comprehensive primary health care and universal health care, public health and medical care, health service, and health system.&nbsp; The chapters are contributed by scholars and practitioners based on historical, interdisciplinary, empirical, and policy research. The book is insightful to academics, public health administrators, policymakers, practitioners, and students interested in health care and organization, looking to transform theory into policy and practice.<br>
Introduction: The Idea of Universal Healthcare: Its Passage Through Time<p>Part I</p><p>Ideas, Concepts, History and Practice of UHC in India</p><p>1. Universal Health Coverage: The Trojan Horse of Neoliberal Policies</p><p>Imrana Qadeer</p><p>2. Universal Healthcare and Health Assurance Through Healthcare Industry and Market Mechanisms: Evidence Versus Ideology</p><p>Indira Chakravarthi</p><p>3. National Health Policy 2015: Growth Fundamentalism Driving Universal Health Coverage Agenda?</p><p>Indranil Mukhopadhyay</p><p>4. Interrogating the Proposed Universal Healthcare in India Through a ‘Quality’ Lens</p><p>Prachinkumar Ghodajkar</p><p>5. Growth of Private Medical Colleges in Maharashtra and Its Implications for Universal Healthcare</p><p>Archana Diwate</p><p>Part II</p><p>Evidences and Experiences of Public Private Partnerships and Health Insurance Schemes</p><p>6. A Critical Look at Public Private Partnership for Health Services in Karnataka</p><p>Sylvia Karpagam, Akhila Vasan, Elangovan Gajraj, Bijoya Roy and Imrana Qadeer</p><p>7. Role of Public Private Partnerships in Ensuring Universal Healthcare for India</p><p>Bijoya Roy</p><p>8. Unaccountable Deaths and Damages: An Analysis of Socio-Legal Implications of Sterilisation Camp Deaths in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh</p><p>P.M. Arathi</p>9. Universal Healthcare and Universalising Health Insurance: Examining the Binary Through the RSBY/MSBY in Chhattisgarh<p></p><p>Rajib Dasgupta, Sulakshana Nandi, Kanica Kanungo, Madhurima Nundy, Ganapathy Murugan, Samir Garg, Dipa Sinha, Sangeeta Sahu and Reeti Mahobe</p><p>10. Aarogyasri Scheme in Andhra Pradesh, India: Some Critical Reflections</p><p>Sunita Reddy and Immaculate Mary</p><p>Part III</p><p>Drugs and Pharmaceuticals: Critique of Policies and Practices</p><p>11. Developments in India’s Domestic Pharmaceutical Sector and Implications for Universal Healthcare in India</p><p>Biswajit Dhar and Reji K. Joseph</p><p>12. Vaccine Policy of the Government of India: Driven and Controlled by Vested Interests?</p><p>Jacob Puliyel</p><p>13. Availability and Access to Medicines: Some Issues in Pricing</p><p>S. Srinivasan and Malini Aisola</p><p>14. Vaccines and Vaccine Policy for Universal Healthcare</p><p>Y. Madhavi</p><p>15. Drugs and Vaccines in Healthcare: Problems and Possibilities</p><p>Pushpa M. Bhargava</p><p>Part IV</p><p>Missing Links in the Debate</p><p>16. The Elusive Development: Poverty, Inequality and</p><p>Vulnerability</p><p>K.B. Saxena</p><p>17. Water Governance and Supply in Urban Areas</p><p>Dunu Roy, Vasudha Akshintala and Ruchika Sharma</p><p>18. Challenges of Reclaiming the Public Health System: Experiences of Community-Based Monitoring and Planning in Maharashtra</p><p>Abhay Shukla and P.M. Arathi</p><p>19. Constrained by Purchasing Power: The Story of Calorie Intake in India Post-Liberalisation</p><p>Sourindra Mohan Ghosh</p>
<div>Imrana Qadeer is a Distinguished Professor at Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India. She is a well-known public health expert. Before joining CSD in 2012, she was a professor in Jawaharlal Nehru University, where she taught for 35 years and then served as a J.P. Naik senior fellow at the Centre for Women’s Development Studies. Her area of interest includes organizational issues in health services in South Asia with a special focus on India, social epidemiology and political economy of health, women’s health and research methodology with an emphasis on interdisciplinary research methodologies. She has also worked with the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, the Planning Commission, Population Commission and the advisory and monitoring bodies for the National Rural Health Mission.</div><div><br></div><div>K B Saxena is a Distinguished Professor at Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India. He was a teacher of Political Science in the University of Delhi before he joined the Indian Administrative Service in 1964 and held important government positions such as Joint Secretary, Land Reforms; Additional, Chief Secretary, Government of Bihar; Secretary in the Ministries of Welfare, Rural Development and Health, Government of India. He was Principal Adviser to the Planning Commission as well. Prof. Saxena prepared the report on Atrocities against Scheduled Castes for the National Human Rights Commission and has contributed a number of articles and papers and edited several books.</div><div><br></div><div>P.M. Arathi, Assistant Professor, School of Indian Legal Thought, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam, Kerala, India. Dr. Arathi holds a masters in law specializing in healthcare law. She has been an assistant professor in law (FIP Substitute) at Government Law College, Thrissur, Kerala, and a research assistant on a collaborative project of the London School of Economics and Jawaharlal Nehru University on spousal violence in India. She also worked as Assistant Professor at Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India.</div>
This book provides a comprehensive overview of universal health coverage in India. It starts by setting the historical context and politics of the debates around universal health coverage (UHC) in India and proceeds to analyze the present crisis of public health in the country. The book examines the present policies on the pharmaceutical industry, missing links in universalizing health, and the importance of social determinants of health. It is divided into five sections, and some of the topics covered include the difference between comprehensive primary health care and universal health care, public health and medical care, health service, and health system.&nbsp; The chapters are contributed by scholars and practitioners based on historical, interdisciplinary, empirical, and policy research. The book is insightful to academics, public health administrators, policymakers, practitioners, and students interested in health care and organization, looking to transform theory into policy and practice.
<p>Discusses the contemporary issues of healthcare system in India</p><p>Examines the role of corporate private sector in the healthcare industry</p><p>Focuses on key developmental issues and a range of related public health policies in India</p>