'Modicare' scheme similar to one in state, says Rajasthan health minister

IANS  |  Jaipur 

The health care scheme announced in the Union budget this year is quite similar to the one introduced in in December 2015, says Kali Charan Saraf, Rajasthan's of Health.

Under the Bhamashah Swasthya Bima Yojana (BSBY), of Rs 30,000 for general illnesses and Rs 3 lakh for critical illnesses is being given to beneficiaries.

An individual gets a risk cover for around 1,715 diseases and is also covered for major procedures like heart surgery and kidney transplant. Around 50 million of the state's estimated 69 million people are said to be registered under this scheme.

The basic aim of the Bhamashah Yojana is to bring about an improvement in health indicators, reduce out-of-pocket expenses and provide financial security to the poor against illnesses, the told IANS. He said it is also bringing in a "revolution in healthcare" in the rural areas of the state.

On the "only difference" between the scheme implemented in the state and the one announced in the Union budget, said under the health care scheme -- dubbed 'Modicare' by a section of the media -- the coverage amount had been increased to Rs 5 lakh for a family.

He says the modus operandi of the new scheme would be similar to the one being executed in Rajasthan, which covers almost two-thirds of the population of the state.

"In the last two years, we have disbursed claims worth Rs 1,000 crore," said, adding that, till date, 1.6 million people had benefited from the scheme in urban and rural areas. "We have empanelled over 1,300 hospitals, both government and private, under the scheme," the said.

Asked if the central government had held a discussion on this scheme with the state before its announcement, he said that when the Union of Health and Family Welfare, J.

P. Nadda, was in about seven months ago, "we had updated him of this scheme as it was running quite successfully in the state".

Asked if the government would like to claim credit for the announcement of the central scheme, he said it was the same whether the central government was running it or the state. "It is an ambitious scheme and hence it is always good if the best things are picked up and used for the benefit of others," he added.

On the challenges in successfully implementing the scheme, he said his team had fought initial hiccups which included the slow rate of card activation, documentation and confusion on treatment packages. "But, it is running smooth now," he added.

Asked about the reasons for poor performance of the in the Niti Aayog report released recently, he said the report had taken 2014-15 figures into consideration. "We had hardly finished a year when the survey for this report was done. A year back, the state was under rule and hence we can't be blamed for a poor performance in the state," he said.

Counting the steps his government had taken, he said that it started 581 Adarsh Primary Health Centres in in all panchayat samitis to receive free medicine and free health check-ups. "They do not face any trouble," he said, adding that a Rajya Janani Yojana had been set which had resulted in a 180 per cent increase in successful deliveries in the state.

(Archana Sharma can be contacted at arachana.g@gmail.com)

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, February 22 2018. 13:08 IST
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