Context:
A Parliamentary Standing Committee has recommended the creation of a live hospital dashboard integrated with the 108 ambulance system under the PM-RAHAT scheme to improve emergency response for road accident victims.
Key Highlights:
- Government Initiative (PM-RAHAT Scheme)
- Launched on February 13 to provide cashless treatment up to ₹1.5 lakh.
- Coverage limited to first 7 days of treatment for road accident victims.
- Proposed Reform – Live Dashboard
- Real-time public dashboard showing empanelled hospitals.
- Helps Good Samaritans and emergency responders locate nearest facilities.
- Aims to optimize response during the “Golden Hour”.
- Integration Measures
- Proposed linkage with 108 ambulance services.
- Already integrated with:
- National Health Authority’s Transaction Management System (33 States)
- 112 Emergency Response System (31 States)
- Institutional & Financial Mechanism
- Reimbursements through Motor Vehicle Accident Fund (MVAF).
- MVAF funded by:
- Insurance companies
- Budgetary support from government
- Coverage & Implementation Status
- All states except West Bengal onboarded.
- Committee flagged lack of quantifiable outreach targets.
- Data on Road Safety
- India records:
- 4.7 lakh road accidents annually
- Around 1.7 lakh fatalities per year
Relevant Prelims Points:
- PM-RAHAT Scheme:
- Central scheme providing financial assistance for emergency treatment of road accident victims.
- Golden Hour:
- The first hour after traumatic injury, critical for survival and recovery.
- Motor Vehicle Accident Fund (MVAF):
- Established under Motor Vehicles Act (Amendment), 2019.
- Used for cashless treatment, compensation in hit-and-run cases.
- 108 Ambulance Service:
- Emergency medical response system across states.
- Good Samaritan Guidelines (Supreme Court, 2016):
- Protect citizens who help accident victims from legal harassment.
- National Health Authority (NHA):
- Implements Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY and related digital health systems.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Significance of the Scheme:
- Addresses high road accident mortality in India.
- Promotes universal access to emergency healthcare.
- Encourages bystander intervention (Good Samaritans).
- Role of Technology in Governance:
- Live dashboard enhances real-time decision-making.
- Improves efficiency, transparency, and accessibility.
- Supports data-driven governance in public health emergencies.
- Challenges Identified:
- Lack of clear outcome targets and monitoring metrics.
- Need for awareness among citizens and hospitals.
- Possible coordination issues across states and agencies.
- Disaster Management Linkage:
- Road accidents treated as mass casualty incidents.
- Strengthens emergency response ecosystem under disaster management framework.
- Social Justice Dimension:
- Ensures financial protection for vulnerable accident victims.
- Reduces out-of-pocket expenditure in emergencies.
- Way Forward:
- Establish measurable targets and performance indicators.
- Ensure nationwide integration of dashboard with emergency systems (108/112).
- Conduct awareness campaigns on Good Samaritan protections.
- Strengthen hospital infrastructure and trauma care networks.
- Leverage digital health ecosystem (Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission) for seamless service delivery.
UPSC Relevance:
- Prelims: PM-RAHAT, MVAF, Golden Hour, Good Samaritan guidelines.
- Mains (GS-2 & GS-3): Governance reforms, public health systems, disaster response, road safety.
