THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary- February 3, 2018 - Topic 2
The NDA government lost precious time in its
first three years in initiating a health scheme that
serves the twin purposes of achieving universal coverage and saving people from
high health care costs. It announced two years ago in the Budget a health
protection scheme offering a cover of ₹1 lakh per family, but ultimately that did not
extend beyond ₹30,000.
Fresh hopes have been raised with the
announcement of Ayushman Bharat in Budget 2018. The
plan has the components of opening health centres for diagnostics, care and
distribution of essential drugs as envisaged in the National Health Policy, and
a National Health Protection Scheme (NHPS) to provide a cover of up to ₹5 lakh each for 10 crore poor and vulnerable
families for hospitalisation. These are challenging goals, given the fragmented
nature of India’s health system. Some States already purchase health cover for
the poor, but do not regulate private secondary and tertiary care services or
treatment costs. The task before the Centre, which has provided ₹3,200 crore for the programme areas, is to now
draw up an implementation roadmap.
Developing countries that launched universal
health coverage schemes over a decade ago, such as Mexico, had to address some
key challenges. These included transfer of resources to provinces, recruitment
of health personnel, and purchase and distribution of medicines to the chosen
units. All these apply to India. Moreover, the steady growth of a for-profit
tertiary care sector poses the additional challenge of arriving at a basic care
package for those who are covered by the NHPS, at appropriate costs. A national
health system will also have to subsume all existing state-funded insurance schemes.
This will give beneficiaries access not just within a particular State but
across the country to empanelled hospitals. In the case of the local health
centres that are planned under the Ayushman Bharat programme, there is
tremendous potential to play a preventive role by reducing the incidence and
impact of non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and hypertension. Such
centres can dispense free essential medication prescribed by all registered
doctors and procured through a centralised agency. But the efficiency of a
large-scale health system depends on strict regulation. The early experience
with state-funded insurance for the poor shows that some private hospitals may
resort to unnecessary tests and treatments to inflate claims. Determination of
treatment costs by the government is therefore important. This will also aid
those with private health insurance, since it eliminates information asymmetry
and provides a comparison point. The Centre must share details of the next
steps.
Vocabulary
Precious: an object, substance, or
resource of great value.
Example: Precious works of art
Synonyms: valuable, costly, expensive, invaluable, priceless, beyond
price
Antonyms: unloved, worthless, unworthy, artless
Diagnostics: a distinctive symptom or characteristic.
Example: But anaphora has never been taken
seriously as a diagnostic for such a distinction.
Synonyms: diagnostics, nosology
Envisage: contemplate or conceive of
as a possibility or a desirable future event.
Example: The Rome Treaty envisaged free
movement across frontiers
Synonyms: imagine, contemplate, visualize, envision, picture
Vulnerable: susceptible to physical or
emotional attack or harm.
Example: We were in a vulnerable position
Synonyms: helpless, defenseless, powerless, impotent, weak, susceptible
Antonyms: entrenched, defensible, unassailable, invulnerable
Fragment: break or cause to break into
fragments.
Example: His followers fragmented into
sects
Synonyms: break
up, break, break into pieces, crack open/apart
Implementation: the process of putting a
decision or plan into effect; execution.
Example: She was responsible for the
implementation of the plan
Poses: a particular way of standing
or sitting, usually adopted for effect or in order to be photographed, painted,
or drawn.
Example: Photographs of boxers in ferocious
poses
Synonyms: posture, position, stance, attitude, bearing
Subsume: include or absorb something
in something else.
Example: Most of these phenomena can be subsumed
under two broad categories
Synonyms: link, tie in, colligate, relate
Empanel: enrol someone on to a jury.
Example: Several of her friends have been
empanelled
Tremendous: very great in amount, scale,
or intensity.
Example: Penny put in a tremendous amount
of time
Synonyms: huge, enormous, immense, colossal, massive, prodigious
Antonyms: little, ordinary, small
Inflate: increase something by a
large or excessive amount.
Example: Objectives should be clearly set
out so as not to duplicate work and inflate costs
Synonyms: increase, raise, boost, escalate, put
up, hike up
Antonyms: deflate
Asymmetry: lack of equality or
equivalence between parts or aspects of something; lack of symmetry.
Example: And when we choose asymmetry it is
usually because we recognise the effect that the absence of symmetry produces.
Synonyms: unbalance, instability, dissymmetry
Antonyms: symmetry, correspondence, symmetricalness, balance
