How To Make Public Health Spending In India Efficient And Effective?
Express Healthcare
|August 2019
Dr Krishna Reddy Nallamalla, Country Director, ACCESS Health International, India gives an insight into certain policy levers that can make current health spending more efficient and effective
-
Public spending on health in India, at ~1.3per cent of GDP, is one of the lowest in the world. While the government is committed to increase it to 2.5 per cent over the next few years, there is an opportunity to make current spending more efficient (least cost per output) and effective (best outcomes in terms of access, quality, and dignity). It is estimated that nearly 20-40 per cent of current spend is wasted. There are no mechanisms to monitor whether this spend is improving health, reducing out of pocket expenses, and is responsive to health needs of people. This article reviews certain policy levers that can make current health spending more efficient and effective.
Allocation
The amount government can spend is limited. However, there is an opportunity to allocate these funds through a systematic process. Effectiveness of money spent decreases in the following order – social determinants of health (clean air, clean water, healthy diet, good habits, safe roads etc.), preventive (vaccination, antenatal care, school health programmes, screening for diabetes and hypertension etc.), curative and palliative care. For example, money spent on single heart transplantation can screen thousands of people for cardiovascular disease risk factors (diabetes, high blood pressure, smoking, high cholesterol, and obesity) and provide preventive care for those at risk. There are scientific tools (collectively termed as Health Technology Assessment or HTA) that undertake multidimensional analysis (cultural, social, political, and economical) to guide the government in proper allocation of its funds.
Spending smart
Government essentially purchases services, either from its own facilities or private providers. Every housewife knows how to make a smart bargain to get value for money.
This story is from the August 2019 edition of Express Healthcare.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Express Healthcare
Express Healthcare
From washing to sterilisation: Hidden design choices that shape daily CSSD realities
Presenting on 'From Washing to Sterilisation: Hidden Design Choices That Shape Daily CSSD Realities', Stinita Dsouza, Senior Marketing Specialist, Equitron Medica Private Limited, explained how smart, practical design decisions can significantly improve the day-to-day functioning of hospital CSSDs.
1 min
December 2025
Express Healthcare
Fireside chat on radiology
In the fireside chat on radiology, Dr (Lt Col) Priscilla Joshi, Professor and Head - Department of Radiodiagnosis and Vice Principal (PG), Bharati Vidyapeeth (DTU) Medical College and Vinay Chutake, Consultant - Medical Technology, Deenanath Mangeshkar Hospital, discussed what it truly means to build future-ready radiology services.
1 min
December 2025
Express Healthcare
Innovation is now rooted in local realities
The 2026 ASCO Breakthrough meeting unites Asia-Pacific oncologists to advance cutting-edge research and collaboration. Dr Vanita Noronha, renowned oncologist at Tata Memorial Hospital (TMH), discusses innovations in cancer care and the importance of clinicians submitting research and participating in discussions at the event. Dr Noronha is also part of the ASCO Breakthrough Program Committee
2 mins
December 2025
Express Healthcare
Futuristic healthcare establishments: What to expect?
Speaking on 'Futuristic Healthcare Establishments: What to Expect?', Dr Meenakshi Deshpande, Senior Consulting Obstetrician, Gynaecologist, Medicolegal Expert and Vice President, IMA Maharashtra, outlined the major shifts shaping tomorrow's healthcare ecosystem.
1 min
December 2025
Express Healthcare
Reimagining Indian MedTech: How Truevis is redefining imaging, innovation and self-reliance
Milind Deshpande, Joint Managing Director, Truevis Technologies, highlights how the company is driving a new era of India's diagnostic transformation through indigenous imaging systems, strategic global collaborations and a strong focus on accessibility and service reliability
2 mins
December 2025
Express Healthcare
Hytrel Film: The Next Frontier in Medical Polymer Innovation
The Shift from Conventional Polymers to Smart Elastomers For years, industries have relied on films made from rubber, PVC, or TPU. Each of these materials has benefits, but none could deliver the perfect balance of flexibility, toughness, chemical resistance, and recyclability. This challenge gave rise to Hytrel® films, made from thermoplastic polyester elastomers (TPEE).
2 mins
December 2025
Express Healthcare
Panel discussion: Evolving landscape of healthcare financing in India
In the panel discussion on 'Evolving Landscape of Healthcare Financing in India', Jyoti Prakash Mahapatra, CFO, Ruby Hall Clinic; Dr Rakesh Shah, COO, KEM Hospital; Kishore Chavan, Head - Central Purchase Department, Dr D.Y. Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre; and Lt Col (Dr) Kushagra Patel (Retd), CEO, Raigad Hospital and Research Centre (Moderator) examined the financial realities shaping hospitals today.
1 min
December 2025
Express Healthcare
How MeitY-NASSCOM CoE fuels Easiofy's AI-imaging leap
Easiofy, an AI-powered imaging platform, built by three women founders-Meenal Gupta, Noor Fatma and Sheetal Tarkas - and now deployed across resource- and radiologist-scare areas in India, is proof that deep-tech startups can solve real-world healthcare challenges, at scale, with ecosystem enablers like the MeitY-NASSCOM Centre of Excellence. From automated radiology workflows to neurosurgical triage tools, Easiofy's journey shows how CoE-supported innovation, steered by stalwarts like Sudhanshu Mittal, Head & Director, Technical Solutions, MeitY-NASSCOM CoE, is quietly reshaping India's healthcare infrastructure
5 mins
December 2025
Express Healthcare
HOME HEALTHCARE THE NEXT FRONTIER
As India faces rising chronic diseases, an ageing population, and growing demand for continuity of care, home healthcare is rapidly shifting from a peripheral service to a strategic extension of hospital care
5 mins
December 2025
Express Healthcare
We are building a rural eye-care workforce that can address avoidable blindness at scale
Dr Umang Mathur, CEO and Cornea Specialist, Dr Shroff's Charity Eye Hospital highlights the role of structured training, CSR collaboration, and workforce development in rural eye care in conversation with Neha Aathavale
2 mins
December 2025
Translate
Change font size

