Public-private partnerships for providing healthcare services
The public-private partnership is an initiative to improve efficiency, effectiveness and equity in the provision of healthcare services. This essay comments on the lessons that should be learned from some examples of such partnerships in various Indian states. By: Abhijit Sen
The private sector is the most important source of healthcare
services in India, providing close to 80 per cent of all services,
according to the government's own reckoning (1). A related fact is that
nearly 75 per cent of health-related expenses are out of pocket and
occur at the point of service delivery.
Over the last few years there have been many initiatives to improve the
efficiency, effectiveness and equity in provision of healthcare
services in the country. Public-private partnership is one such
initiative.
Before considering emerging public-private partnerships in health in
India, it may be worth recalling that healthcare has historically (even
in developed nations) been a private sector activity. The emphasis on
the government's responsibility for providing or supporting healthcare
services for the entire population is recent. The National Health
Service in the United Kingdom, often seen as the model for delivering
universal and comprehensive healthcare services, was established only
in 1948, after World War II.
Starting from the Bhore Committee report in 1946 there has been an
increasing emphasis on the state providing healthcare services through
a three-tiered approach in India. However, despite these efforts and
despite many healthcare and family welfare plans and programmes made
since then, health outcomes in India have remained closer to those in
sub-Saharan Africa than in industrialised nations among which India
would like to be counted. Public-private partnerships aim to harness
the large pool of private sector healthcare resources and draw them
into the process of nation building.
A key difference in the public-private partnership approach in India
today and earlier such initiatives around the world is that those were
implemented in times of economic crisis when state funding for the
health sector needed to be reduced. India, on the other hand, is
experiencing unprecedented economic growth and there has been an
explicit commitment to increasing state funding on health from 0.9 per
cent to 2-3 per cent of the gross domestic product (2). Thus the
primary reason to encourage private participation does not appear to be
a lack of funds but a lack of managerial and technical ability.
It is too early to say whether these experiments have achieved the
expected results of efficiency, effectiveness and equity. However, it
may be useful to look at examples of public-private partnerships in
different Indian states to learn some lessons before it is too
late.
Recently I was in Namkun where the Jharkhand state health department
has many of its offices. While waiting for a meeting with the director
of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) I saw a convoy of vans and
jeeps passing through the compound. On enquiring, I was told that these
were among the couple of hundred ambulances that the government had
given to various private organisations two years earlier, to facilitate
the transport of patients from the interior to hospitals. However, no
programme guidelines had been drawn up, no agreements signed and no
arrangements made for operational costs. The government was still to
formalise procedures. In the interim, many of these vehicles were,
reportedly, being used as taxis.
One of the earliest state governments to start public-private
partnerships since the NRHM was announced was Bihar. In some areas this
was introduced to provide pathology and diagnostic services, operate
ambulances services in the state and run additional primary health
centres. The ambulance contract ran into trouble right at the outset
and had to be suspended. The pathology laboratory started contracting
out the work and I have heard complaints from members of patient
welfare committees in Bihar that government clinics are now ordering
many more investigations than they did before.
Yet another story relates to partnerships to run additional primary
health centres. Some 30 such clinics were handed over to
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in 200I heard complaints that the
government did not release money on time, or that funds being given to
NGOs was much less than what was being spent in a similar government
institution. I learned that these contracts were not renewed this
year.
The most high profile public-private partnership in the country today
must be the Chiranjeevi programme launched by the Gujarat government.
Gujarat is one of the most industrialised states in the country and a
major hub of the pharmaceutical industry. Field experience tells us
that, despite official figures to the contrary, the state's maternal
mortality ratio is high, reflecting poor access to healthcare. There is
also a great disparity between districts in access to healthcare. The
state government drew up an ambitious scheme to ensure institutional
deliveries for the poor through the active engagement of the private
sector. In a pilot project, obstetricians in five districts were
offered a financial package roughly Rs 1.75 lakh for every 100
deliveries they conducted. This amount was arrived at by proportional
costing of a normal delivery, an assisted delivery and one with a
surgical intervention. The first year of the programme has been
completed and it is now being implemented all over the state.
The scheme sounds remarkably simple in its conceptualisation and
delivery and typifies what may be called a win-win situation. The state
issues a service voucher worth about Rs 2,000 to each poor pregnant
woman and ensures that the provider is reimbursed: it is something like
a pre-paid taxi service but you don't have to pay for the receipt.
While some adverse reports have started coming in, certain design
elements may be of greater significance. For example, the process of
recruiting obstetricians does not include any quality parameters. In
other words, though we know that the majority of maternal deaths take
place in the postpartum period no quality criteria had been laid down
for postpartum institutional care that would be mandatory for normal,
assisted or caesarean delivery.
The financial dimensions of this arrangement are also worth examining.
Assuming a population of 10 lakh for an average district and a poverty
level of 33 per cent, one can expect around 8,000 childbirths among the
poor in the district each year. With the Chiranjeevi programme a total
of up to Rs 1.5 crore will be provided as cash vouchers to ensure
institutional delivery for all poor women. This reasonably large amount
to be shared by 100 obstetricians practising in the district is
effectively taken away from strengthening services at the primary
health centre and community health centre, services that would have
provided services for diarrhoea, tuberculosis, malaria, hepatitis,
chikungunya and a host of other health conditions - besides ensuring
safe deliveries. But then as I mentioned earlier, this is a time of
economic prosperity and it is possible that this additional sum will
not take away from what is necessary to strengthen the system.
There have been some reports from Gujarat that government centres are
referring easy cases to private practitioners; private practitioners
refer difficult cases to district hospitals. Government centres do not
wish to operate outside fixed hours (and deliveries take place when
least expected) and obstetricians under the government contract do not
want to handle complications.
Another scheme, the Vande Mataram scheme, launched with much fanfare by
the then union health minister in collaboration with the Federation of
Obstetrician and Gynaecologists Societies of India, died an unsung
death because it depended on obstetricians providing free services to
the poor on one designated day of the week.
As the bulk of poor Indians seeking care visit the private sector,
efforts to include the private sector within a formal planning and
monitoring system for healthcare service delivery through the
public-private partnership approach should be welcome. However current
efforts are inadequate on many counts and the problems must be
addressed if a robust, accountable and quality public-private
partnership mechanism has to be developed. Some measures that need to
be introduced are:
- Setting up a set of technical and ethical parameters and standards for service delivery common to different levels of the healthcare system. A beginning has been made with the Indian Public Health Standards and these should be applicable to both the public and the private sector.
- There must be new regulatory mechanisms for the healthcare system including the pharmaceutical industry which is among the least regulated in India.
- The cost of healthcare should be regulated just as other consumer products are, through a system of maximum prices. The voucher system can be seen as a precursor of this mechanism.
- An efficient monitoring and enforceable system should be introduced of penalties for breach of regulations and standards.
One hopes that the poor will then receive the services they need and
at a cost they can afford, and providers will receive a fair
compensation for their services.
Source:Indian Journal of Medical Ethics
http://www.ijme.in/154co174.html
