Health Care in India : News & Updates

Government's First Naturopathy Centre In Uttar Pradesh Likely To Come Up In Varanasi​

A proposal to open Uttar Pradesh's first government naturopathy center in the Chaubepur area of Varanasi has been prepared by the state Ayush department and the draft has been sent to the Centre for approval.


Land for the naturopathy center has been identified in Chaubepur, Minister of State for Ayush (independent charge) Daya Shankar Mishra (Dayalu) told PTI on Thursday. Apart from this, the state government has set a target of opening 12,500 Ayush wellness centers and is preparing to open 1600 Ayush wellness centers by 2025. Out of this 500 centers have already been established, he said.


The minister said his department has started nine hospitals with 50 beds in different districts including Varanasi, Amethi, Kanpur Dehat, Kanpur Nagar, etc. These are integrated hospitals where treatment is given by methods of Ayurveda, Homeopathy, and Unani, he said. He said the government wants people to come forward to help open Ayush hospitals and those who have one acre or less land should donate it to build the hospitals.


The government will open such hospitals in the name of the parents or grandparents of the landowners, Mishra said. Till now two dozen land proposals for this have been received from different districts of the state, which are being considered for opening Ayush hospitals. With this initiative, the land will be available for hospitals and the names of the ancestors of the land givers will also become immortal, he added.


The minister also noted that during the pandemic people understood the importance of Ayurveda and now people are taking refuge in it for the treatment of lifestyle diseases.
 

How India Took Sting out of Malaria Could Become Global Example, Says US Expert to News18​

India could soon become a global example for its malaria-elimination strategies as it has managed to reduce malaria-driven deaths by almost 80 per cent in the last five years, said a top officer of a Washington-based not-for-profit organisation, Malaria No More.

According to Kelly Willis, managing director at the organisation, “in 2015, 384 people died in India due to malaria in comparison to 2021, when just 90 deaths took place. As per these figures, it’s a cut of almost 80 per cent in just five years. The data shows, the cases of malaria also came down from 12 lakh in 2015 to just 1.5 lakh in 2021.”

India can be a leader in showing what strategies and technologies are needed to accomplish the elimination of malaria across the globe, Willis told News18.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi was among the 18 global leaders who endorsed the malaria-elimination roadmap of the Asia Pacific Leaders Malaria Alliance at the East Asia Summit held in Malaysia in 2015. It was then that the alliance leadership set the goal of ensuring that the region becomes free of malaria by 2030.

As you go that last mile, from 1.5 lakh cases to zero – to be certified as malaria-free in 2030, India needs to show zero transmission starting 2027 till 2030 – the country has five years to eliminate malaria.

“Every single of those 90 deaths (which took place in India last year due to malaria) is a tragedy and worldwide, of course, malaria last year killed more than 6 lakh people,” said Willis.

She said that malaria perpetuates the cycle of poverty.

Those 1.5 lakh cases of malaria in India which are concentrated in states like Odisha or in areas where it goes unchecked are really preventing some communities from flourishing, she added.

“Uttar Pradesh has the second-largest population in India, and earlier, it used to have a high incidence of malaria but now we’ve seen a drastic decline, reflecting improvement,” said Willis.

Now, the top five highest malaria burden states are Chhattisgarh followed by West Bengal, Odisha, Maharashtra, and Jharkhand.


Right messaging to vulnerable community is key​

“India’s national strategic plan is being drafted and we alongside a lot of other critical partners such as the World Health Organization, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and other technical partners are helping the health ministry and vector-borne control centre to draft that national strategic plan," said Willis.

One of the most critical strategies going forward, she said, is continued messaging and education of the communities about the ways they can protect themselves from malaria.

“Every household contributes to the suppression of malaria transmission by allowing their homes to be sprayed with indoor, residual spraying insecticide which actually kills mosquitoes very effectively at sleeping time,” Willis said. “Avoiding mosquito bites is basically what individuals can do for themselves and getting those messages out there, just making sure that the most rural and vulnerable populations have access to that information is critical.”

Malaria No More runs an additional team of 265 people who are extensions to the ASHA Workforce and participate in educating the communities that are almost inaccessible.

It also distributes long-lasting, insecticide-treated bed nets and carries rapid diagnostic tests along with anti-malaria medicines.

“So, we need to continue to build a workforce that can reach those most rural communities,” said Willis.

‘Need to keep budgets adequate’​

Willis said the other strategy to eliminate malaria by the given timeline is just to make sure that at the central government level, we’re not forgetting about malaria.

Prime Minister Modi has reinforced this goal on a couple of occasions.

“But we need to remind everyone that this is a feasible goal, and we need to keep our eyes on it. That means we need to keep the budgets high," she said. “We need to make sure that the appropriate number of resources are being invested… within the vector-borne control disease, an inappropriate share is invested in malaria."

The data shared by Willis shows a trend highlighting an increase in funding (both from global funds and government) from 2018 to 2019 and then a subsequent decline in 2020.

Adopting new technologies​

“India has the opportunity to be a real trailblazer in integrating new technologies into its malaria programme,” Willis said. “So, how quickly will India recommend a mass vaccination programme if the next-generation vaccine is shown to be effective? Or how willing is India to use genetically modified mosquitoes strategically in states, where the malaria cases aren’t coming down as fast as they should? What about the use of monoclonal antibodies?”

There’s also a whole category of new technology that Malaria No More is actually driving, she said, which is data and analytics and forecasting technology where the organisation uses meteorological data, observation data, and a whole host of other data sources to predict the outbreak.

Such technology, Willis said, allows states to be incredibly more precise in their programming. “Our tool that we are piloting is called the malaria prediction planning tool which is a very sophisticated artificial intelligence-driven forecast tool that produces very easy-to-read data which can help state governments to prepare and send rapid diagnostics and anti-malarial medicines in advance," she said. “This is a complete India-based innovation developed in Odisha. We started out using data from an international organisation from IBM but now we have found that IMD data is just as high quality and we no longer have to outsource that piece.”
 

Centre deploys High Level team to Mumbai to assess and manage outbreak of Measles cases​

Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has decided to depute a high-level multi-disciplinary team to Mumbai to take stock of the upsurge in cases of Measles in the city. The team will assist the State Health Authorities in instituting public health measures and facilitate operationalization of requisite control and containment measures.


The 3 member Central team to Mumbai comprises of experts drawn from the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), New Delhi, Lady Hardinge Medical College (LHMC), New Delhi and Regional Office for Health and Family Welfare, Pune, Maharashtra. The team is headed by Dr. Anubhav Srivastava, Deputy Director, Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP), NCDC.


The team will also undertake field visits to investigate the outbreak and assist the State Health Departments in terms of public health measures, management guidelines and protocols to manage the increasing cases of Measles being reported in Mumbai.
 

Global recognition to family planning measures; India receives EXCELL Award at International Conference on Family Planning​

India’s family planning measures got appreciation on a global stage with the country receiving Excellence in Leadership in Family Planning (EXCELL) Awards -2022. The award was received at the International Conference on Family Planning held in Pattaya, Thailand.
To begin with, India came out as the only country which bagged this award in the ‘country category’ at the conference. Union Minister for Health and Family Welfare, Mansukh Mandaviya while appreciating the efforts being made in the field of family planning said, “The award is a recognition of India’s efforts under PM Narendra Modi’s leadership towards ensuring access to quality family planning choices based on right information & reliable services”.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has long been stressing the issue of population explosion in the country. In fact, on August 15, 2019, while addressing the nation on independence day, he said that citizens with small families need to be held up as role model as such decisions is an expression of patriotism and love for the nation.

What is the International Conference of Family Planning?​

The conference focuses on universal access to family planning. It provides a platform to discuss various issues pertaining to family planning and awareness about the same. Presently, more than 120 countries, numerous organizations, and individuals are members of this conference. This year, the event registered participation of around 3,500 delegates excluding the people who attended it virtually.
Current Scenario of Family Planning schemes
As per the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, the country has made considerable progress in adopting modern contraceptive methods that are helping in enabling couples to make conscious and informed decisions regarding family planning.

Some of the flagship schemes of the government are –​

National Family Health Survey (NFHS)​

First conducted in 1992-93 and the latest one in 2019-21 – NFHS 5 is a survey that is conducted nationwide in a representative sample of households. The survey is being conducted with an aim to provide high-quality data on the health and family welfare situation of the country and simultaneously highlight the main issues pertaining to the areas. It comes under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and International Institute of Population Sciences (IIPS), Mumbai is the nodal agency for coordination and technical guidance for the survey.
Further, NFHS 5 highlights that the overall Contraceptive Prevalence Rate (CPR) has registered a substantial increase from 54 percent to 67 percent. CPR indicates the percentage of women who comes under the age of 15-49, married or in-union, who are currently using, or whose sexual partner is using, at least one method of contraception.
In addition, the survey also stated that 68% of modern method contraceptive users obtain their methods from the public health sector.
Fertility, infant and child mortality, the practice of family planning, reproductive health and many such areas are covered during the survey. However, the latest NFHS-5 witnessed an addition of some new areas like preschool education, access to toilet facilities, bathing practices during mensuration along with methods and reasons for abortion. For the very first time, NFHS-5 also included the percentage of women and men who have ever used the internet.

Mission Parivar Vikas​

The mission is one of the flagship schemes of the Government. Under this, 145 districts in 7 states of Assam, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar, and Uttar Pradesh are identified to be in high focus based on the Total Fertility Rate (TFR).
The above-identified 145 districts have a high TFR compared to rest of the country and collectively they constitute 28% of India’s population. Further, the mission focuses on the acceleration of access to high-quality family planning choices based on information, reliable services and supplies within a rights-based framework.
 

India's population growth appears to be stabilising: United Nations​

As the global population reached 8 billion, the UN on Tuesday said India's population growth appears to be stabilising which shows that the country's national policies and health systems, including access to family planning services, are working.

The world population touched eight billion on Tuesday and India was the largest contributor to the milestone, having added 177 million people, the United Nations said., noting that for China, which added 73 million people, the projection is its contribution to the next billion in the global population is to be in the negative.

"The good news is that India's population growth appears to be stabilising. The Total Fertility Rate more or less the average number of children born per woman has declined from 2.2 to 2.0 at the national level," the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) said.

A total of 31 states and Union Territories (constituting 69.7 per cent of the country's population) have achieved fertility rates below the replacement level of 2.1, it said.

The main reasons for the decline in fertility include increase in adoption of modern family planning methods (from 47.8 per cent in 2015-16 to 56.5 per cent in 2019-21) and a reduction in unmet need for family planning by four per cent points over the same period, it said.

"This indicates significant improvements in access to family planning related information and services. In summary, it shows that India's national population policies and health systems are working," UN body said.

India is a youthful nation with the largest cohort of young people anywhere in the world, with major potential to achieve its demographic dividend. While many parts of the world are ageing, India's youthful population can be a global resource to solve global problems, the UNFPA said.

While the world's population will continue to grow to around 10.4 billion in the 2080s, the overall rate of growth is slowing down, it said.

The world is more demographically diverse than ever before, with countries facing starkly different population trends ranging from growth to decline, the UNFPA added.

"We must focus on investing in each person to achieve a quality of life that allows them to thrive equally and with dignity in our modern world, building inclusive societies and sustainable economies in the face of overlapping crises.

"And India, coupling efforts to drive gender equality with the greatest youth generation in history, supported by world class innovation in digital public goods, is positioned to help the world achieve the Sustainable Development Goals more than any other," said Shombi Sharp, UN Resident Coordinator in India

The UN said two-thirds of the global population lives in a low fertility context, where the lifetime fertility is below 2.1 births per woman.

At the same time, population growth has become increasingly concentrated among the world's poorest countries, most of which are in sub-Saharan Africa.

Against this backdrop, the global community must ensure that all countries, regardless of whether their populations are growing or shrinking, are equipped to provide good quality of life to their people and can lift up and empower their most marginalised sections, the UN said.
 

India's population growth appears to be stabilising: United Nations​

As the global population reached 8 billion, the UN on Tuesday said India's population growth appears to be stabilising which shows that the country's national policies and health systems, including access to family planning services, are working.

The world population touched eight billion on Tuesday and India was the largest contributor to the milestone, having added 177 million people, the United Nations said., noting that for China, which added 73 million people, the projection is its contribution to the next billion in the global population is to be in the negative.

"The good news is that India's population growth appears to be stabilising. The Total Fertility Rate more or less the average number of children born per woman has declined from 2.2 to 2.0 at the national level," the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) said.

A total of 31 states and Union Territories (constituting 69.7 per cent of the country's population) have achieved fertility rates below the replacement level of 2.1, it said.

The main reasons for the decline in fertility include increase in adoption of modern family planning methods (from 47.8 per cent in 2015-16 to 56.5 per cent in 2019-21) and a reduction in unmet need for family planning by four per cent points over the same period, it said.

"This indicates significant improvements in access to family planning related information and services. In summary, it shows that India's national population policies and health systems are working," UN body said.

India is a youthful nation with the largest cohort of young people anywhere in the world, with major potential to achieve its demographic dividend. While many parts of the world are ageing, India's youthful population can be a global resource to solve global problems, the UNFPA said.

While the world's population will continue to grow to around 10.4 billion in the 2080s, the overall rate of growth is slowing down, it said.

The world is more demographically diverse than ever before, with countries facing starkly different population trends ranging from growth to decline, the UNFPA added.

"We must focus on investing in each person to achieve a quality of life that allows them to thrive equally and with dignity in our modern world, building inclusive societies and sustainable economies in the face of overlapping crises.

"And India, coupling efforts to drive gender equality with the greatest youth generation in history, supported by world class innovation in digital public goods, is positioned to help the world achieve the Sustainable Development Goals more than any other," said Shombi Sharp, UN Resident Coordinator in India

The UN said two-thirds of the global population lives in a low fertility context, where the lifetime fertility is below 2.1 births per woman.

At the same time, population growth has become increasingly concentrated among the world's poorest countries, most of which are in sub-Saharan Africa.

Against this backdrop, the global community must ensure that all countries, regardless of whether their populations are growing or shrinking, are equipped to provide good quality of life to their people and can lift up and empower their most marginalised sections, the UN said.
 

WHO stands by its action on Gambia deaths after DCGI says ‘premature’ link​

The World Health Organisation (WHO) Friday said it stands by the alert it raised on four India-manufactured cough syrups over their potential link to deaths of children in The Gambia, after India’s drug regulator told the intergovernmental body that it had made a “premature deduction”.
Responding to questions sent by The Indian Express, the WHO said in a statement: “WHO’s mandate is to issue global alerts about potential risks. WHO stands by the action taken,” the statement from the organisation said.

It added: “When many children die of (a) mysterious sickness, it’s a tragedy that means WHO had to act quickly.” The agency even earlier said that the alert, which asked other countries to be on the lookout for the four syrups, was similar to what it does in other cases, including the case of similar acute kidney injury seen in children in Indonesia.

Seventy children in The Gambia had died of acute kidney injury “potentially” linked to the India-manufactured syrups, the WHO had said.

A December 13 letter from the Drugs Controller General of India to the intergovernmental agency stated that it made a “premature deduction … regarding the cause of death” and that all its further communications were a “reaffirmation of this deduction, without waiting for independent verification.”

Friday’s response from WHO also stated that the organisation contracted laboratories in Ghana and Switzerland, which tested the suspected cough syrups from The Gambia and confirmed excess levels of ethylene glycol and di-ethylene glycol. “These contaminated syrups are dangerous and should not be in any medicine, ever,” it said.

“WHO immediately shared the confirmatory results with authorities in The Gambia, and India, as well as the manufacturer of the suspected products-Maiden Pharmaceuticals,” the response said.

The letter by India’s DCGI’s V G Somani said that the control samples — samples of syrup from the same batch exported to the Gambia maintained by the company for quality control purposes — did not contain ethylene glycol or di-ethylene glycol.