Health Care Does Not Need the PPP Route

Context:

  • The article critiques the Public–Private Partnership (PPP) model in healthcare, arguing that it is unsuitable for delivering equitable, affordable, and accessible public health services.
  • It uses Andhra Pradesh’s experience—especially proposals to expand medical colleges and hospitals via PPP—as a case study to highlight systemic risks of privatisation in a critical social sector.
  • The debate is situated within India’s broader challenge of healthcare capacity gaps, regional inequities, and rising out-of-pocket expenditure.

Key Highlights:

PPP in Medical Education & Healthcare

  • Andhra Pradesh expanded medical colleges rapidly, adding 17 colleges in three years, with plans for 10 more under PPP mode.
  • PPP colleges involve private investment with government support such as:
    • Subsidised land
    • Public financing (e.g., loans via NABARD)
    • Guaranteed patient inflow through government health schemes
  • Critics argue PPP is driven more by investor profitability than public health outcomes.

Risks to Public Health System

  • PPP at district level may fragment the public health system and weaken long-term capacity building.
  • Shifts focus from preventive and primary care to revenue-driven tertiary services.
  • Private partners may:
    • Cherry-pick profitable services
    • Undermine free care guarantees
    • Increase informal privatisation of public assets

Evidence & Financial Concerns

  • Government bears major risks:
    • Cost overruns
    • Litigation from private partners
    • Long-term fiscal liabilities
  • Free care for 70% of inpatients and reserved beds under schemes like Aarogyasri / Ayushman Bharat may become unsustainable.
  • Lack of evidence-based assessment on whether PPP improves health outcomes or equity.

Human Resource & Equity Issues

  • PPP does not address shortage of doctors in rural and tribal areas.
  • Medical graduates often prefer urban or overseas employment, despite public investment in education.
  • Rising fees in private institutions exacerbate inequality in access to medical education.

Governance & Regulatory Challenges

  • States often lack institutional capacity to design, monitor, and enforce PPP contracts.
  • Healthcare PPPs involve complex clinical, ethical, and financial dimensions not suited to rigid contracts.
  • Risk of privatisation by stealth through asset transfer and management control.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Issue: Appropriateness of PPP model in healthcare delivery.
  • Causes:
    • Fiscal constraints of States
    • Pressure to rapidly expand health infrastructure
  • Government Initiatives:
    • PPP frameworks in infrastructure
    • Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY for inpatient care
  • Benefits Claimed by PPP:
    • Faster infrastructure creation
    • Private sector efficiency
  • Challenges:
    • Profit motive vs public welfare
    • Regulatory capacity deficit
    • Equity and access concerns
  • Impact:
    • Risk to universality and affordability of healthcare

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Facts & Provisions:
    • Health is a State Subject (Seventh Schedule)
    • Right to health linked to Article 21 (Judicial interpretation)
  • Keywords & Concepts:
    • Public health systems
    • Universal Health Coverage (UHC)
    • Privatisation vs welfare state
  • Static & Conceptual Linkages:
    • Primary–secondary–tertiary care pyramid
    • Preventive vs curative healthcare
  • Way Forward:
    • Strengthen public healthcare infrastructure directly
    • Invest in primary care and disease prevention
    • Evidence-based policy evaluation before adopting PPP
    • Improve medical education quality and equitable access
    • Build strong regulatory and monitoring institutions

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS II: Governance – Public policy, social sector delivery
  • GS III: Economy – Public expenditure, PPP models
  • GS IV: Ethics – Equity, social justice, role of State in welfare
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