Achieve your IAS dreams with The Core IAS – Your Gateway to Success in Civil Services

In June 2025, India ranked 99 out of 167 countries in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Index — its best-ever performance. This improvement reflects policy progress in access to services and infrastructure. Yet, India continues to face critical challenges in health and nutrition, especially in rural and tribal areas. The editorial emphasizes the urgency of achieving SDG 3: “Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.”

Key Issues and Arguments

1. Current Status of Health Indicators

  • Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR): 97 per 100,000 live births (target 70).
  • Under-5 mortality rate: 32 per 1,000 live births (target 25).
  • Life expectancy: 70 years (below the target of 73.63 years).
  • Out-of-pocket health expenditure: Nearly double the targeted 7.83% of total consumption.
  • Immunisation coverage: 93.23% (still below universal 100%).

These indicators highlight the gaps in India’s health progress despite improvements.

2. Structural Challenges

  • Poor health infrastructure and economic inequality limit access to services.
  • Social determinants such as nutrition, sanitation, and cultural stigma exacerbate gaps.
  • Mental health remains under-addressed due to taboos and lack of trained professionals.

3. Pathways for Progress

a) Universal Health Coverage (UHC):

  • Public health insurance can reduce catastrophic expenditure.
  • Evidence from World Bank studies shows stronger insurance systems ensure equity.

b) Strengthening Primary Healthcare:

  • Expanding high-quality centres across rural and urban India is crucial.
  • Preventive health can reduce hospitalization costs and improve long-term outcomes.

c) Harnessing Digital Health:

  • Telemedicine and integrated digital health records bridge rural-urban access gaps.
  • Examples from the Lancet Digital Health Commission show how platforms enhance vaccination and mental health tracking.

d) School-based Health Education:

  • Compulsory curriculum on nutrition, hygiene, reproductive health, and mental health.
  • Examples: Finland and Japan’s school health reforms significantly reduced mortality and improved life expectancy.

Policy Gaps Identified

AreaGap
Maternal & Child HealthMMR and under-5 mortality above SDG target
Health FinancingHigh out-of-pocket expenditure burden
Preventive HealthWeak focus on awareness, nutrition, hygiene
Digital HealthLimited integration in rural and tribal regions
Mental HealthPersistent stigma, lack of systemic support

Suggestions for the Way Forward

  • Embed health education in school curricula.
  • Expand primary care infrastructure and integrate it with digital health.
  • Promote UHC to minimize catastrophic health expenditure.
  • Focus on rural & tribal populations with targeted interventions.
  • Adopt best practices from countries like Finland (school health) and Japan (nutrition-based reforms).

Conclusion


Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *