Health Insurance Access and Disease Profile for Women in India
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Abstract
Women’s access to healthcare is an important public health and human rights issue. India has been at the forefront of efforts for Universal Health Coverage (UHC) via publicly funded health insurance (PFHI) programmes. However, the rapid rise of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) signals a need to re-examine and reorient health policy priorities. The paper examines the changing burden of NCDs which include cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), cancer, diabetes and kidney disorders, and chronic respiratory diseases for women in India, its determinants, particularly the role of women’s agency, and compares the concordance between the burden of disease with health accessed via insurance using the case study of Meghalaya, India. Evidence from our research indicates the need for state specific policies to address the NCDs among women and secondly to understand the NCD burden based on risk profiles and its district wise variation.
Q&A with the authors
- What is the core message conveyed in your paper?
Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are rapidly rising among women in India, especially cardiovascular diseases, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases and diabetes. This emerging health challenge raises questions about health access for women. Public-funded health insurance programs are growing, and enrolment in the national health insurance scheme is rising fast. However, there are several barriers impeding access to healthcare for women, both within households and in the interaction with the health system. This paper draws attention to women’s health needs and the changing burden of disease that varies sharply across Indian states, and points to the challenges and opportunities in enabling access to health for women, including key policy questions that researchers engaged in this field must ask.
- What presents the biggest opportunity?
Public-funded health insurance schemes, including the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY), represent an important opportunity to enable affordable health services. However, there is a limited understanding of social, economic and technological barriers in access to these schemes, as well as the challenges faced in the interactions with health services. There is a need for gendered analysis across Indian states to identify regional and context-specific interventions to enable health access for women.
- What is the biggest challenge?
The biggest challenge has been non-recognition of women’s empowerment within the domain of NCDs and its role in enabling access to insurance as well as the use of health services. It is important to unpack the role of women’s empowerment, through their agency in seeking healthcare and the social norms that dictate their choices within families and the health system. Further, a lack of empowerment on the economic and digital fronts can restrict the agency of women to seek the healthcare services they need.
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The Centre for Social and Economic Progress (CSEP) is an independent, public policy think tank with a mandate to conduct research and analysis on critical issues facing India and the world and help shape policies that advance sustainable growth and development.