In the modern world, besides food, clothing and
shelter, education and health are the two essentials of life. Hence development
of humanity is not possible without these fundamental necessities. A man can
survive for some days even without food, but without treatment during an
emergency, survival is impossible.
But in this class divided society, the ruling class
has robbed the toiling mass, of their right to health and access to essential
medical treatment. They treat it as a ‘privilege’ for a small section of people,
rather than a fundamental human right.
With the propagation of science, the last century
has witnessed spectacular achievements in modern medicine which were beyond
one’s imagination a few decades back. The discovery of detailed human anatomy
and physiology upto the molecular level, the invention of ‘miracle’ drugs, the
improvement of surgery and anaesthesia, the application of sophisticated
technologies in diagnostics, organ transplantation or genetic engineering have
brought revolutionary changes. Totally fatal cases can now be saved, which was
unthinkable even a few years back.
But due to extreme social inequalities, the ghastly
exploitation of our working folk by the ruling classes, and the tightening grip
of imperialism, more than 80% of the world population is yet to get any benefits
of science. They continue to live in endless pain and misery and fail to get
even two square meals a day. When, on the one hand, thousands of millions of
dollars are being spent to explore any evidence of life on Mars, thousands of
human lives on earth perish every day like insects and hornets.
The Indian Scenario
Our ‘Saare Jahan Se Achha’ motherland spends
Rs. 30 to 35 crores a day on the Kargil war. It does not hesitate to invest
millions of dollars for ‘Sankhya Vahini’ — the information highway. But it also
occupies the first place as the land of the highest number of starving,
diseased, homeless and illiterate people.
Out of the one billion population, no less than 300
million goes to bed, every day, without a night meal. Yet huge amounts of food
grains are exported at the will of the imperialist bosses. More than 60% of
people are without any primary health care. Above 35% of the rural population is
without safe drinking water and village women have to walk 5 to 10 kms a day on
an average to get drinking water for her family in the summer months. Proper
sanitation is a joke for 60% of Indians.
India also tops the list of killer and disabling
diseases as can be seen in the following table :
Tuberculosis
(TB)
|
Total
idenfied
patients
1.5
crores
(half
of
the
total
world
cases)
New
cases
:
25
lakhs
per
year
Death
:
5
lakh
cases
per
year
|
Diarrhoeal
diseases
in
`under
five’
children
|
50
lakh
cases
a
year
with
15
lakh
deaths
(highest
in
the
world)
|
Malaria
|
10
lakh
cases
and
50,000
deaths
a
year
|
Leprosy
|
Total
40
lakh
cases
(1/3rd
of
the
total
world
cases)
|
Blindness
|
Total
cases
35
lakhs
(world’s
highest)
Most
of
them
are
due
to
Vit
A
deficiency
and
non-operated
cataract
New
cases
each
year
:
40,000
|
Viral/Bacterial
Pneumonia
|
15
lakh
deaths
a
year
|
Infectuous
Sexual
diseases
|
50
lakh
total
patients
|
Anaemia
in
Pregnancy
|
70%
|
Protein
energy
malnutrition
in
children
|
50%
|
Other
deficiency
diseases
|
20
crores
|
The infant mortality rate (73 out of 1000 live
births) and perinatal mortality rate (44.2 out of 1000) are alarmingly high. So
far as the human development indices are concerned, India occupies 134th
position out of 170 countries whereas the position of Sri Lanka is 96 and that
of Pakistan is 118.
A
Short History of Health System Development
In ancient and medieval times health was never
considered as a state responsibility but as a personal or familial concern.
From the 14th and 15th century the European
countries took control over the oceans with their developed naval forces. The
history is well known of, how they spread like a cancer over Asia, Africa and
Latin America to establish their colonies. Unbelievable amounts of wealth looted
from these colonies served as the fuel of the Industrial Revolution.
Thus in Europe big industries were established and
the industrial proletariat also emerged as a class. Like all fields of science,
medical science also started developing. Modern medicine freed itself from age
old unscientific practices, quackery, witchcraft and myths. Europe inherited the
allopathic medicine from ancient Greece and gave it a new shape, which became
capable of saving the lives of even terminally ill patients.
But at the same time it became so expensive that it
went out of reach of the working class.
The expectation of the common people to share the
benefits of modern treatment became a part of their struggles against social
inequalities. The demand for state sponsored free treatment became popular.
But the ruling classes were not ready to oblige.
They preferred to keep health care reserved as another costly purchasable
commodity.
During this time, in 1917, the Russian Revolution
occurred which, like in all other fields of life, left its permanent imprint
also on the sphere of health care.
The Soviet Union became the first country in the
world, which recognised people’s right to health at state expense. The socialist
government, in spite of all odds, built up a wonderful network of primary and
higher health care in the vast country, for all its citizens.
The workers of the capitalist feudal and
semi-feudal countries were greatly inspired by the revolution in Russia. They
also started to claim a right to free health care.
The crisis of capitalism gave birth to two world
wars in Europe over a span of 30 years. After the second world war China freed
itself from the shackles of exploitation. Socialism was established in East
European countries. Freedom struggles intensified in the former colonies and
semi-colonies of Asia, Africa and Latin America.
World capitalism was shaken by the fear of
socialism, which was spreading like a prairie fire. Hence it changed its
tactics. It gave sham independence to former colonies, only to transfer them
into semi-colonies. To stop communism, it adopted the economic model of a
‘welfare state’ or capitalism with a human face. The aim was to show that the
solutions are already within the framework of capitalism and that there is no
need to opt for communism.
As a panacea for the agitating people, the West
European countries and the USA introduced free or highly subsidised medical care
for its people. It was not a gift of mercy, but a trophy won by the people by
protracted battles. The money needed to run the free services was drained from
the colonies of the third world.
Whereas in India the imperialists solicit for
abolition of minimum state run health care facilities, in their own countries
they provide free national health care service or state financed health
insurance. The amount of free services varies from 60% (in the USA) to 100% (in
Canada). (Though in the USA there is a two tier system for the rich and poor,
even still it is much better than what we get here)
Recently, in the face of the deep economic crisis,
most countries tried to withdraw some of the facilities. They have managed to
withdraw some in the US, but have been unsuccessful in Europe due to the
resistance of the working class.
Health Care after ‘Independence’
In British India, the Englishmen had no intention
to build up a well organised health system to cater for their subjects. They
only established some medical colleges to produce some doctors trained in
European medicine and qualified to treat the British officers, army and the
Indian Jamindars and comprador bourgeoisie.
The indigenous medical systems, like Ayurveda,
Yunani etc., reached a dead end, resulting in unscientific practices, due to
utter neglect and lack of research and development. A few charitable hospitals
and missionary centres were opened, while the rest of the urban and rural folk
were left to their destiny.
The transfer of power in 1947, converted India into
a semi-colonial and semi-feudal state where the British legacy was maintained
and the interests of the imperialists and their running dogs were well
protected.
But the new rulers could not ignore the aspirations
and expectations of the people, due to the vast upsurge against colonial rule,
with thousands of martyrs laying down their lives. The Nehru-Patel-Gandhi axis
were afraid that unless some of the popular demands were fulfilled, the Indians
would quickly identify this sham independence and opt for socialism. One such
popular demand was ‘Free health and medical service by the state’.
But, most cunningly the constitution-makers did not
include the right to health in the list of fundamental rights. They rather
included it in the optional ‘suggestive’ part of the constitution which means
that one cannot charge the government in the court of law for not providing
health to the people. Where even the ‘fundamental rights’ are grossly violated
every now and then, one can well imagine what would be the fate of their ‘right
to health’.
Inspite of that, due to public pressure, the
governments were forced to set up health centres, hospitals etc., in urban and
rural areas where free treatment by doctors, some free medicines, facility for
indoor admission, operations etc., were available. Though grossly inadequate,
and fragile, some network was established. In 1949-50, it was decided that about
23,000 health centres would be established in the country. Initially a health
centre for each 10,000 people was fixed as a target. As time passed the target
was lowered and lowered. For example, the proportion was reduced to a centre for
every 40,000 people, then for every 1 lakh people and so on. Ultimately, there
remained no target at all. Till 1996, only 14,000 (about 60%) of the proposed
centres have been established. Yet, how many of them are actually in running
condition is difficult to say.
Since its inception, the health budget was grossly
inadequate and in comparison to the foreign debt service, defence or central
expenses, it was ridiculously trivial. With each new ‘five year plan’ the health
budget has reduced further to reach its nadir at 1.67% in the eighth plan. In
comparison to the other countries (even some Asian countries) it is negligible.
Let us go through the following charts to realise the horrible situation.
Budgetary
Allocation
in
different
sectors
(as
percentage
of
total)
|
Foreign
Debt
Service
|
32%
|
Defence
(Pre-Kargil)
|
18%
|
Central
Planning
|
16%
|
Education
|
2.5%
|
Health
|
1.67%
|
Health
Budget
as
%
of
Total
Budget
|
Five
Year
Plans
|
%
Health
Budget
|
First
|
3.85%
|
Second
|
3.3%
|
Third
|
2.4%
|
Fourth
|
2.14%
|
Fifth
|
2.04%
|
Sixth
|
1.98%
|
Seventh
|
1.82%
|
Eighth
|
1.67%
|
Health
Budget
in
other
countries
as
%
of
total
budget
|
Countries
|
Health
Budget
|
USA
|
13.8%
|
UK
|
15.2%
|
China
|
12.7%
|
Sri
Lanka
|
4.7%
|
Philippines
|
3.1%
|
Still, the introduction of a three tier system of
primary health care, the initiation of a National Health Programmes (for
Tuberculosis, Malaria, Diarrhoeal diseases, Blindness) etc., could offer some
relief to the people. Infectious diseases were controlled to some extent and
health parameters like infant mortality rate, maternal mortality rate, crude
death rate etc., were lowered and life expectancy was raised.
New Economic Policy’s Impact on Health Care
The so-called ‘mixed economy’, which was actually a
semi-colonial and semi-feudal model to protect the interest of the imperialist
bosses and their lackeys like Tata, Birla, Ambani etc., the feudal lords,
bureaucrats and corrupt politicians, led India to a state of complete economic
collapse and bankruptcy.
This crisis forced the rulers to shed off their
mask of humanity, and withdraw even the small benevolent services which they
gave.
Health is the first sector to face the axe : the
national health programmes are being wound up, health care service is being
gradually withdrawn, a moratorium on the establishment of new centres at states
expense, a ban on the recruitment of health workers, the stoppage of the supply
of life saving drugs and the introduction of ‘users fees’ at all levels. As a
result killer diseases like Tuberculosis, Malaria, Kala Azar, Pneumonia, etc.,
are increasing at a rapid pace. Diseases which were suppressed to some extent
have bounced back (like Asiatic Cholera, Dengue) and long forgotten diseases
like Plague have reappeared to cause havoc. The health parameters are
deteriorating day by day.
In a nutshell the effects can be described as —
(i) Withdrawal of free health service by the
state
(ii) Privatisation of the health sector, with
medical service becoming a ‘commodity’
(iii) Rural people suffer the most due to their
poor power to pay
(iv) Health business is flourishing rapidly (as
it is a commodity which is always urgent and beyond the scope of bargaining)
which attracts TNCs to loot us in the name of providing modern health care
The New Economic Policies have had a disastrous
impact on health care in India. The World Bank has dictated the following
policies for health care:
(1) Withdrawal of the state’s contribution to
health and medical treatment by massive budgetary curtailment
(2) Introduction of ‘users fee’ (i.e.,
payments) at all levels i.e., OPDs, Indoor and Diagnostics (from Primary
Health Centres to state hospitals)
(3) Moratorium on the establishment of new
health centres
(4) Gradual abolition of expensive ‘curative’
treatment in primary and secondary levels and emphasis on so-called
‘prevention’ in the form of propaganda
(5) Rampant privatisation and patronisation of
health oriented business
(6) Introduction of contractual service in
place of permanent service for medical and paramedical staff, including
teachers in medical colleges
Since free medical treatment is expensive (as it
requires the engagement of doctors and paramedical staff, supply of medicine,
diagnostic facilities etc.), the World Bank-IMF solicit for its gradual
shrinkage in the name of giving emphasis on preventive measures. But preventive
and curative services are mutually complementary and not an alternative to each
other.
The ‘new policy’ gives maximum emphasis on
vaccination — knowing fully well that the vast majority of killer diseases are
not preventable by it. Even the vaccine against tuberculosis (BCG) is only
partially effective. (See box on folio)
Family planning (actually birth control and medical
termination of pregnancy) is another pet project of the imperialists in the
third world countries. They want to project ‘population explosion’ as the sole
cause of poverty in these countries. This is a tactic adopted by the rulers to
divert our attention from the horrible loot of wealth from these countries. Even
today, with equal distribution of the foodgrains produced, India can support a
population of 1.25 billion. Consumption wise, a US citizen consumes 200 times
more than that of an average Indian. But the imperialists put all emphasis on
‘Birth Control’ and as a result the budget on family planning swells from 0.14
crore in the First Five year Plan to 6500 crores in the 8th Plan. An Indian
woman is also denied the right over her own body.
The other priority sectors, according to the World
Bank-IMF nexus are :
(i) Consciousness about nutrition and balanced
diet — in absence of any ‘diet’ at all.
(ii) School Health Programme — In the
background of 80 to 90% dropouts at the primary and secondary level.
(iii) Propaganda against Tobacco, Alcohol,
Drugs (Narcotics) and AIDS — which are not at all the major health problems
of India.
(iv) Upgradation of a hygienic atmosphere in
houses — where more than 40% of the urban population lives in dingy slums or
on footpaths.
The mode of propaganda and consciousness building
through telecasting, banners, etc., in the backdrop of overwhelming poverty and
illiteracy, is a practical joke.
Privatisation
Privatisation is another key word of the new
policy. Even at present 75% of health care is a purchasable commodity and in the
hands of private companies. 61% of all health setups in the country (in 1996)
are private in comparison to 16% previously (1976). Only 7% of doctors are
employed by the state in 1995-96 compared to 35% in 1975-76. Above 60% of the
total expenses in the health care sector comes from the pockets of the patients
and their relatives whereas the states’ contribution is less than 30%.
The MNCs, TNCs and their local touts are not
satisfied even with this. They want ‘total privatisation’ and a full market
economy in this field.
At present health care is one of the biggest
industries in the world worth $2.8 trillion (Rs. 1175,00,000 crores). In India
the total business is worth Rs. 73,000 crores with a growth rate of Rs. 8,000
crores a year (13%). The total money circulating in this sector is more than the
total turnover of 12 top companies including Hindustan Lever, ITC & Reliance.
The business includes private hospitals, clinics
and diagnostic centres, diagnostic instruments and reagents; health insurance
(particularly after privatisation of the Insurance sector); medical software;
medical architecture; consultancy services etc. The largest single aspect of
this is the business of pharmaceuticals (medicines) worth Rs. 12,000 crores.
The WTO and New
Patient Act
Our discussion will remain incomplete without a
mention of the new patent act which is likely to hit a death blow particularly
to local pharmaceutical industry and raise the price of medicine to exorbitant
levels.
The new patent act is an integral part of the WTO
agreement. It will change the fundamental rules of the older act. The changes
are as follows :
(i) Product patents to replace process patents
— which will prevent research and development in the medicinal field and
also prevent inventions of the same product by a cheaper method, which could
lower the cost of medicine.
(ii) Patent for 20 years in place of 5 years —
which will help the TNC giants loot the people ruthlessly and charge
whatever price they want.
(iii) Abolition of the ‘Licence of Right’ act —
by which the government could cancel patents of a life saving drug, if the
patent holder company failed to produce the same in the country within a
stipulated period.
(iv) The domain of patent has been extended to
include all biological products, plants, microbes, seeds, and even human
genomes. The patenting of ‘Neem’ and ‘Haldi’ by the US companies are glaring
examples. The take over of indigenous and herbal medicines by the TNCs, will
now be facilitated.
As a result of this, the cost of medicine will
increase many fold and the government will loose all control even on the price
of life saving drugs. Transnationals, which already control 90% of the Indian
drug industry and siphon thousands of crores of dollars to their headquarters,
will be benefited further. And the poor people will die of diseases with even
the simplest medicine going beyond their reach.
Conclusion
The health sector in India is a part of the
semi-colonial and semi-feudal system which serves, not the people, but the
interests of the foreign multinationals and their brown-skinned agents like Tata,
Birla, Goenka or Ambani. The mafias, politicians of all parliamentary parties,
bootleggers, criminals, bureaucrats and media barons do their best to serve
their bosses and get a share of the cake, so that the ringmasters can exploit
the Indian people smoothly and more effectively. The police, paramilitary and
military forces, fed on the money of taxpayers, are ruthlessly suppressing all
genuine and justified demands of the common man.
With health care getting more and more elitist,
only 10% of our population will have access to proper health care, while 90%
will be pushed to a slow, tortuous death from disease. And with hygiene also
being defacto privatised (witness the spurt in mineral waters, and private water
purification systems) and the government’s abdication of all responsibility,
disease will spread hundred fold. The gainers will be the pharmaceutical
companies, private hospitals, manufacturers of hygiene systems and health
equipment and the health insurance companies.
The socio-political structure of India is rotten to
its core. Naturally the structure of health care cannot be anything better, as
it is part and parcel of the whole system.
Minor modifications within the framework of
parliamentary policies, as advocated by the vote mongering parties, are no
solution. The whole system is to be uprooted and thrown away by revolution.
There is no other short cut to better health and a better life.
Pulse Polio Campaign
— A Criminal Conspiracy Against Our People
The gigantic
publicity and enormous expense for the WHO (World Health Organisation)
sponsored Pulse Polio Campaign (PPC) is not only a gigantic fraud but a
treacherous and dangerous scheme against the people (that too children) of our
country, by the Indian rulers. Promoted and pushed by both BJP and opposition
parties, when in power, the PPC is yet another example of how our rulers dance
to the dictates of the imperialists even if it endangers an entire new
generation.
The fact is that
the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) has been banned in the US. And it is these drops,
which are being given to our children, at a huge cost of Rs. 2,000 crore to
the Indian exchequer. In the West, ever since the disease was eradicated (in
1975), the dozen-odd new cases every year have been caused by the vaccine
itself. That is why the WHO has recommended the use of injectable polio
vaccine (IPV) for the developed countries, but the OPV is suggested for the
under-developed countries. After the West started discarding OPV in 1995, the
WHO — through the UNICEF — has been trying to find new markets in the poorer
countries. As part of this process, they launched the PPC throughout the
world, including India.
Unlike the IPV
which is a dead virus, the OPV is a live, weakened virus. Sometimes, the weak
virus may mutate and become "neuro-virulent", causing what is called vaccine
associated paralytic polio. Besides, the OPV is often ineffective, as it
requires to be stored between minus 2 and minus 8 degrees Celsius. Any break
in these "cold-chain conditions" due to improper administration or
cold-storage facilities renders it ineffective. In India where the bulk of the
vaccines have be given in the distant rural areas and slums, and administered
by lakhs of ordinary people, what percentage of the vaccines have maintained
these stringent cold-storage conditions? Yet again, though the OPV is much
cheaper than the IPV (Rs. 3 compared to Rs. 450) it requires five doses.
Missing a single dose will reduce its effectivity. After all this, it is not
surprising that in 1999, India had 60% of the total polio cases reported in
the world. In fact, Dr. Indir Nath of the AIIMS (All India Institute of
Medical Sciences) has said that she has seen a rise in the number of "immunised"
polio victims in recent years.
But the history of this treachery and betrayal goes back even earlier. As part
of the immunisation programme, a Rs. 70 crore IPV manufacturing unit was
planned in 1988, at Guragaon, near Delhi. But, two years later, in an
unexpected volte face, the unit was wound up in favour of imported OPV from
America, France and Russia. This switch was done under instructions from the
WHO to the Health Ministry, obviously after the negative impact of the OPV,
came to be known in the West by the late 1980s. So, in India our rulers wound
up a planned IPV project, for the unreliable OPV, merely in order to please
their imperialist masters.
|