UID And Public Health: Specious Claims – Dr. Mohan Rao, Newsclick
Submitted by admin <http://newsduniyaonline.com/users/admin> on Wed,
02/23/2011 - 10:40

Among the many reasons cited for India to proceed ahead with the Unique
Identification (UID) project -that it will facilitate delivery of basic
services, that it will plug leakages in public expenditure and that it will
speed up achievement of targets in social sector schemes - the most specious
is perhaps the claim that it will help India reach her public health
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Despite impressive economic growth in the country, in addition to starvation
deaths, the huge load of preventable and communicable diseases remains
substantially unchanged. Although life expectancy has increased and infant
and child mortality rates have declined, these have been relatively modest.
Infant and child mortality take an unconscionable toll of the lives of 2.2
million children every year. We are yet to achieve the National Health
Policy 1983 target to reduce the Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) to less than 60
per 1000 live births in all the states of the country. More serious is the
fact that the rate of decline in the IMR has been decelerating, from 27 per
cent in the eighties to only 10 per cent in the nineties. The same is true
for the rate of decline in the mortality rate of children under five from 35
per cent in the eighties to 15 per cent in the nineties. It is clear that
India will not reach the Millennium Development Goals of reducing IMR, U5MR
and the MMR.

India has more maternal deaths than any other country. The NHP 1983 target
for 2000 was to reduce Maternal Mortality Rate to less than 200 per 100,000
live births by 2000. However, in 2000, between 115,000 and 170,000 women
died in childbirth, accounting for about one-quarter of all maternal deaths
worldwide Far from declining over the 1990s, maternal and neo-natal
morbidity and mortality rates in India have, at best, plateaued. High, and
unconscionable as these levels of maternal mortality are, it is nevertheless
critical to bear in mind that they represent just a fraction of the
morbidity and mortality load borne by women in the country. Thus, for
instance, deaths due to anaemia among women who are not pregnant are twice
as much as among those who are. Similarly, communicable diseases take a much
higher toll than that due to pregnancy and childbirth.

The reasons for this state of affairs are complex and stem above all from
lack of political and financial commitment to build a public health system
that can meet the challenges we face. As the National Health Policy (NHP)
2002admitted, this is, at 0.9 per cent of the GDP the fifth lowest public
expenditure on health in the world. The decline in public investments over
the years was matched with growing subsidies to the private sector in health
care in a variety of ways. Thus we have the largest – and one of the least
regulated – private health care industry in the world. Evidence from across
the country indicates that access to health care has declined sharply over
the last two decades. As the government admits, the policy of levying of
user fees has impacted negatively upon access to public health facilities,
especially for poor and marginalised communities, and to women.

It is to be remembered that along with poor public financing, India has one
of the highest private medical expenditures in the world: out- of- pocket
expenditure accounts for 83 per cent of the total health expenditure in the
country. It is thus not surprising that, as the NHP 2002 notes, medical
expenditure has emerged as one of the leading causes of indebtedness. At the
same time, the proportion of people not availing any type of medical care
due to financial reasons increased between 1986-87 to 1995-96: from 10 to 21
per cent in urban areas, and from 15 to 24 per cent in rural areas. It is
not just the poor, but even the middle classes – the upper echelons of whom
welcomed globalisation – are finding it increasingly difficult to meet
medical care costs.

*These did not occur because of lack of “demand” for health care as the UID
working paper on public health would have us believe as it sets out what it
calls “killer application” to provide citizens an incentive to obtain a UID
card in order to meet health needs. This unfortunate language apart, the
fact that we have not built a health system is hardly fortuitous. It is true
that we do not have good quality health data or indeed even vital
statistics; it is true that this should come from integrated routine health
system and not ad-hoc surveys.*

*However, the UID is not designed to meet the public health challenges in
the country and should not pretend to do so. On the contrary, given that
many diseases continue to bear a stigma in this country, the UID scheme has
the unique potential of increasing stigma by breaching the anonymity of
health data collected. It thus violates the heart of the medical encounter,
namely confidentiality. By making this information potentially available to
employers and insurance companies, the scheme bodes further gross violations
of health rights.*

The justification that the launch of the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana
provides a “killer” opportunity for the UID scheme to free ride is equally
moot; the only evaluation of the RSBY scheme, in Kerala a state with
extremely good health indicators, indicates a number of problems, in
particular an inability to reach marginal groups (Narayana D., “Review of
Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana”, Economic and Political Weekly, vol.xlv,
No.29, 17th July 2010).

The biometric health insurance cards issued to Delhi slum-dwellers under the
State government’s “Mission Convergence” scheme requires card-holders to
identify themselves with a fingerprint before they can avail of free
hospital treatment. NGOs involved in the scheme say that they are inundated
with complaints about malfunctioning fingerprint readers which fail to
authenticate even after multiple swipes. Since the scheme is tied up with
private health providers, users in need of emergency treatment often end up
paying inflated fees for services that they could get at lower cost, if not
free, at a government hospital.

While there are systemic problems for low health access and outreach (such
as low – and falling- immunization coverage), to pretend that the UID scheme
offers a solution to the problem is dissembling at best, and dishonest at
worst. The UID scheme has thus little to offer for improvement in the public
health situation in the country. On the other hand, the UIDAI has much to
gain from a link-up with the public health system. As the UIDAI working
paper on public health puts it, “The demand pull for this needs to be
created de novo or fostered on existing platforms by the respective
ministries. Helping various ministries visualise key applications that
leverage existing government entitlement schemes such as the NREGA and PDS
will get their buy-in into the project …. and will also build excitement and
material support from the ministries for the UID project even as it gets off
the ground.”

Given the significant potential for misuse of data, human rights violations
and breach of confidentiality of health information, one hopes that the
Ministry of Health will restrain its “excitement” and undertake a rigorous
analysis of the costs and risks of the scheme before providing “material
support” to the UID project.

Dr. Mohan Rao is a Professor at the Centre of Social Medicine and Community
Health at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

http://newsduniyaonline.com/content/uid-and-public-health-specious-claims-%E2%80%93-dr-mohan-rao-newsclick


<http://newsduniyaonline.com/content/uid-and-public-health-specious-claims-%E2%80%93-dr-mohan-rao-newsclick>Adv
Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
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*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists
of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1

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