Civic Engagement in Health Governance

 GS2 – Polity

Context:

India’s doorstep healthcare schemes underscore the need for active community participation in health governance.

Mechanisms for Civic Participation:
  • Civic Engagement: Structured involvement of citizens in health decision-making.
  • Community Oversight: Village Health Sanitation and Nutrition Committees (VHSNCs) plan and monitor equitable healthcare access.
  • Public Grievances: Jan Sunwai forums address complaints via open hearings.
  • Hospital Governance: Rogi Kalyan Samitis, registered societies, manage facility-level resources.
  • Urban Engagement: Mahila Arogya Samitis mobilise women in urban slums for health action.
  • Social Audits: Community-led audits assess service quality and fund utilisation.
Governance Value of Civic Engagement:
  • Transforms health systems from service providers to social contracts.
  • Strengthens legitimacy and trust in governance frameworks.
  • Ensures accountability by curbing corruption and inequitable resource allocation.
  • Enhances equity, prioritising marginalised groups.
  • Integrates community inputs into policy, ensuring local health priorities are addressed.
  • Encourages knowledge exchange between communities and health experts.
Barriers to Meaningful Engagement:
  • Inactive platforms undermine community agency and institutional credibility.
  • Mindset barrier: Viewing communities only as service recipients.
  • Leadership disconnect: Doctor-led systems may ignore community perspectives.
  • Platform inefficiency: Ambiguous committee mandates reduce accountability.
  • Fund misallocation: Bureaucratic delays limit community health initiatives.
  • Awareness shortfall: Limited knowledge of health rights reduces citizen participation.
Way Forward:
  • Empowered citizens and responsive systems are key for participatory health governance.
  • Mindset shift: Recognising communities as partners.
  • Civic empowerment: Health rights education for informed citizen decision-making.
  • Inclusive access: Actively involve marginalised groups.
  • Provider training: Sensitise staff to integrate community perspectives.
  • Committee empowerment: Clear roles and adequate resources.
Participatory Health Governance Programmes:
  • Tamil Nadu: Makkalai Thedi Maruthuvam – Doorstep NCD care with community participation.
  • Karnataka: Gruha Arogya – Home-based care mobilising accredited local health workers.
  • Kerala: Aardram Mission – Upgraded primary care through participatory family health centres.
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