Modi Government Promises Targeted Healthcare To 184 Poorest-Performing Districts
NEW DELHI
-- Promising to provide equitable healthcare that addresses intra-state
disparities, Prime Minister Narendra Modi today said 184 poorest-performing
districts have been identified where more resources would be infused and
focussed programmes will be carried out.
Listing out
achievements and strides made by India especially in maternal and child health,
he exuded confidence that India would reach close to achieving the millennium
development goal of reducing under-five mortality rate.
"One
of our major concerns is equity. As a step towards ensuring equitable health
services across regions that suffer from intra-state disparities, and to bring
about sharper improvements in health outcomes, a total of 184 poorest
performing districts all over the country have been identified.
"Special
efforts are being made to put in more resources and focussed programmes in
these areas," he said here while addressing the 'Global Call to Action'
Summit 2015 being attended by representatives of 24 nations.
The summit
seeks to ensure cohesion among countries to end preventable maternal and child
death.
Talking
about India's achievement in eliminating maternal and neonatal tetanus much before
the global target date of December 2015, Modi extended his government's
commitment to the global community with technology and programme intervention
to combat disease.
"The
message is of our commitment, that we will ensure that every woman, every child
who can be saved will be saved. We also need to make a clarion call to the
world to join hands in taking such steps that would ensure this.
"India
stands committed to not only allocate resources towards this in our country,
but also to help the world and all those countries which needed any support. It
is my personal vision and my Government s firm commitment," the Prime
Minister said.
He said he
has witnessed people getting financially weak because of "unfortunate
health episodes" and proposed to "institutionalise a system where
marginalised communities receive universal health care and financial
protection. We must experiment and learn from each other".
Noting that
India's under-5 mortality rate has reduced from 126 in 1990 to 49 against the
global average of 46, he expressed confidence that "India is likely to
reach close to achieving the MDG target if the current trend of annual decline
is sustained".
He said the
drop also reflected India's achievement of under-5 mortality rate decline at an
"accelerated pace" compared to global rate of decline.
Describing
as "truly historic" India's "victory" in eradication of
polio, Modi that from being a country accounting for more than a half of the
global polio cases in 2009, to being declared free "reflects India's deep
commitment to child health".
"Last
year, I had made a commitment of assisting the SAARC countries in keeping it
polio free. We have also made a commitment to provide Pentavalent vaccines to
such SAARC countries as would need it.
"We
will offer whatever experience we have to the world community. India would be
happy to assist any country with technology, system strengthening and programme
implementation capsules," he said.
Asserting
that India's "birth cohort" of 26 million is a formidable challenge,
Modi said India's commitment to succeed is also strong.
The Prime
Minister said the world "sadly" continues to lose about 289 thousand
mothers and 6.3 million under-5 children every year even as the world transits
from the Millennium Development Goals to Sustainable Development Goals.
The 24
priority countries participating in the Summit today contribute nearly 70 per
cent of the preventable maternal and child deaths.
Modi said
the joint statement issued subsequent to the visit of the US President Barack
Obama to India in January this year also agreed to further accelerate the joint
leadership to end all preventable maternal and child deaths.
"How
we shape the world in the next 15 years will make the difference between
prosperous, optimistic nations, and insecurity and unrest".
Modi also
underlined his government's committment to ensuring that no child in India dies
of a vaccine-preventable disease and said the largest immunisation drive
another mission known as "Mission Indradhanush" has been launched.
It seeks to
accelerate the annual rate of immunisation from existing 1 per cent to more
than 5 per cent per year so as to achieve more than 90 per cent coverage by
2020.
He said
that programmes like the National Health Mission has resulted in improved
health outcomes and Janani Suraksha Yojana has ensured that 75 per cent of the
deliveries take place in health care centres.
Extending
India's support to all the 24 participating countries in the summit including
the SAARC nations, he said India s "rich" experience in universal
immunisation including 'mission indradhanush' could be shared with them.
"We
could train personnel and skill them for better management of child sickness in
our Special Newborn Care Units (SNCUs) as well as share our experience at home
based new born care," he said.
The two-day
summit is being co-hosted by the Health Ministry along with Ethiopian Health
Ministry, USAID, UNICEF, The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Tata Trusts.
The summit
is a confluence of health ministers from the 24 priority countries that
committed to the global Call to Action for Child Survival in June 2012 apart
from health ministers from India, international academic experts, health
practitioners and civil societies.
Modi Government Promises Targeted Healthcare To 184 Poorest-Performing Districts
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