National
Health Policy-2017 Excoriated
The
Swacch Bharat Sweep-stake
The National
Health Policy-2017 (NHP-2017), approved by the Union Cabinet in its meeting on
15.03.2017, has raised more doubts than satisfaction about the aim, intent and
priority of the Modi government in achieving
universal health coverage and delivering quality health care services to all at
affordable cost. The policy has been in the drafting stage for more than
two years since it was placed in the public domain on 31 December, 2014 for comments, suggestion and feedback.
However, NHP-2017 is actually a step down of the Modi Government from the
policy’s original draft that had proposed health be considered as a Fundamental
Right. The policy repeatedly emphasized on “health assurance” instead of adequate availability of healthcare as
a constitutional right. The policy further marginalized the
government’s role as a “strategic
purchaser” of secondary and tertiary healthcare from the
private sector
in lieu of an essential provider of healthcare services to its fellow citizens.
In India, private facilities in healthcare sector barely exist in underserved
areas and the gap in healthcare services is also the worst in those areas. Moreover, the policy
proposes to increase government spending in healthcare from the existing 1.15%
to 2.5 % of GDP by 2025. But, the draft of the policy had promised the
timeframe of 2020. Thus, within a little more than two years of time the
government has extended the number of years necessary to increase public
spending on health to 2.5% of GDP. Even if achieved, it would be half of what
the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends as minimum. Ironically, there
has been a gap between the claims and actual public expenditure on health for
last three years. And, the healthcare budget for the financial
year 2017-18 is less than that of the 2011-12 allocation if inflation is
adjusted. Under this background, the “policy
thrust” of NHP-2017 has to be scrutinized and questioned. The new National
Health Policy asserts to institutionalize
inter-sectoral coordination at national and sub-national levels to optimize
health outcomes. For this, the policy
identifies coordinated action on seven priority areas for improving the
environment for health. These are:
- The
Swachh Bharat Abhiyan
- Balanced,
healthy diets and regular exercises.
- Addressing
tobacco, alcohol and substance abuse
- Yatri
Suraksha –
preventing deaths due to rail and road traffic accidents
- Nirbhaya
Nari –action
against gender violence
- Reduced
stress and improved safety in the work place
- Reducing
indoor and outdoor air pollution
All
these “seven priority areas” must be
examined at length to understand the government’s policy perspective on healthcare.
Let us begin with the Swacch Bharat Abhiyan (Clean India
Movement).
Swacch
Bharat is not a new initiative of Modi government
Swacch
Bharat Abhiyan, in contrary to the truth, has been touted as the most
indigenous and innovative project of Modi government. Since NHP-2017 is supposedly
aimed at pre-empting the occurrence of
diseases, therefore, it seems logical to identify the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan as the top most priority for healthcare. But, such
initiative was taken much earlier. In fact, on 1 April 1999, the Government of India restructured the
Comprehensive Rural Sanitation Programme and launched the Total Sanitation
Campaign. The scheme was later renamed as Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan (NBA) on 1 April, 2012 by the then Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh. The Narendra Modi Cabinet just renamed the NBA
as Swachh Bharat Abhiyan on 24 September, 2014. Probably, the utter failure of
“Nirmal Gujarat Campaign” faced by Narendra Modi as the Chief Minister of the
state feared the Prime Minister Modi to search for a name that does not contain
the word “Nirmal” in it.
Nirmal Gujarat campaign
– 2007
Amidst pomp and show, Nirmal Gujarat campaign
was launched by Chief Minister Narendra Modi on 30 December, 2007 from
Gandhinagar calling upon the people of the state to maintain cleanliness so
that the state becomes healthy and attractive. He also noted that clean cities
and villages have been achieved only by people's awareness. In fact, Modi had
12 years to clean up Gujarat but no substance was achieved except relying only
on people’s awareness. This is
because of inadequate government funding and improper administrative reform w
hichdid not yield any significant success for the campaign. On Nirmal Gujarat
Mission’s request, a survey was jointly conducted by the Planning and Resources
on Urban Development Affairs (PRUDA) and the All India Institute of Local Self
Government (AIILSG) during February – May, 2009 to evaluate the success rate of
‘Nirmal Gujarat’ campaign particularly, its
impact on sanitation standards in slums including the effects of the
campaign on eradicating open defecation
and the impact on the level of
cleanliness in urban areas and its report “Nirmal Gujarat Rapid Impact Assessment” was published in June,
2009. Few excerpts from the report would suggest the ‘success story’ of Nirmal
Gujarat campaign after two years of its launch:
Ø
74.5% slum dwellers
did not have immediate access to Pay & Use toilet. These were mainly
because of higher cost of Pay & Use toilets and their unavailability in the
immediate areas around the slums.
Ø
41.6% of survey
participants chose open defecation over toilets.
Ø
A little over 10% used
toilets.
Ø
In absence of waste
collection service, citizens disposed off their garbage on streets and such
phenomenon was common within lower income groups.
Ø
Generally richer
people were more satisfied than poorer ones.
Nirmal Gujarat had
more critically polluted cities
During
2010, three years after the launch of Nirmal Gujarat campaign, six areas of the
state namely Ankleshwar, Vapi, Ahmedabad, Vatva, Bhavnagar and Junagadh were
declared as the critically polluted by the Ministry of Environment and Forests
(MoEF), Government of India, based on the Comprehensive Environment Pollution
Index (CEPI). CEPI is a score sheet on pollution developed by IIT-Delhi and
central pollution control board (CPCB). CEPI scores of 70 and above were
considered as critically polluted industrial clusters. Vapi was found to be 88.09 in the year 2010. Gujarat Pollution
Control Board (GPCB), in its report “Comprehensive
Environmental Pollution Abatement Action Plan, Vapi Industrial Cluster– Gujarat” published from Gandhinagar during 2010
acknowledged the fact and assured the MoEF that it would implement its action
plan to improve environment quality of the region. This action plan is known as
the Vapi
Action Plan.
The details of Vapi
Action Plan
Vapi
Action Plan had various management and mitigation measures like safe disposal
of industrial waste and treated water; strengthening air quality monitoring
etc. The plan also recognized that the non-compliance by industries mainly
caused environmental pollution in the region. Earlier in 1989, Vapi was declared as critically
polluted. Therefore, in 2010, a moratorium was imposed on the expansion of
industries and the setting up of new ones at Vapi. Despite all its action plan,
CEPI index score in 2013 showed that Vapi still topped the pollution charts
with a score of 85.31. Considering the impact on human health and very high
level of exposure of humans to the pollution, MoEF re-imposed the ban on any
permission to any new or expansion of project in Vapi.
Environment plunged into
corporate plunder
Despite
hazardous pollution issues, the plutocracy of Gujarat was continuously pushing
to lift the moratorium. In 2016, Modi
government revised the CEPI to do away with the parameters like the impact on human health and environmental
degradation. The new CEPI index has ensured that the areas like Vapi
would no longer be classified as critically polluted and, hence, to allow for
an inflow of industrial activities. As a result, in November 2016 MoEF lifted
the moratorium on expansions and new investments in three industrial clusters
in Gujarat namely Ankleshwar; Vapi and Vatva. This clearly shows Modi
government’s unquestionable commitment towards corporate profit over
environment’s safety and people’s health.
Consequences of Modi’s
Nirmal Gujarat Campaign
Nirmal Gujarat Campaign was all about a
cosmetic programme. It was needed to bring fundamental changes in policies and
to reform the system. But, the trusted corporate watchman Narendra Modi, even
as the Chief Minister, was never interested in doing something that could
affect the corporate profit. With money from the government exchequer to run
the campaign; with more and more focus on media propaganda and much of fanfare,
the over publicized Nirmal Gujarat Campaign ended up with lack of sewerage
facilities in colonies after colonies, water logging resulting into mosquito
outbreak, no garbage lifting vehicles in many municipal areas, no Panchayat
Safai Kamdars (sweepers) etc. Beyond the showcase super highways; shopping malls
and the famed Sabarmati riverfront, overall Gujarat remains unclean.
An insight of Modi’s
Swacch Bharat Abhiyan
India
is committed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals and, hence, it has to
achieve universal access to safe drinking water, adequate sanitation and
hygiene to all its citizens. With sanitation as a key priority, Swacch Bharat Abhiyan
(SBA) was introduced by restructuring the erstwhile Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan (NBA)
for raising the standards in sanitation. The completion of SBA
is targeted in the year 2019 which is the 150th birth anniversary
year of Mahatma Gandhi. But, after two and half years of SBA’s introduction,
the question remains, “Can India become clean, as Swachh Bharat hopes, by
2019”?
The
Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation (MDWS), the nodal body that
implements the SBA has been allocated Rs 20,011 crore in the Union Budget-2017. There is an upward trend in budgetary
allocations from 2012 to 2017. According to MDWS, sanitation coverage has gone
up from 42 percent in October, 2014 to 60 percent in 2017. But, is that
sufficient? Moreover, beyond sanitation SBA includes supply of drinking water,
solid waste management, sewerage, storm water drains etc. Swacch Bharat Abhiyan
fails to fulfill its promises in every count.
Toilet plan behind schedule
Following a Swacch Bharat cess, levied from November 2015,
nationwide toilet construction gained momentum. According to the government
statistics, nearly 16 million toilets have been constructed in rural India
during these two years. The Centre has set a
target of construction of 100 million toilets in five years time by 2019 to
make India open-defecation free which means the construction of 20 million toilets
per year. If the rate of construction is just an average of 8 million for first
two years, will it be able to construct rest 84 million toilets in next three
years? Moreover, we need to look beyond just in terms of toilet construction
but also into issues of sustainability of toilets. There are important issues
like lack of acceptability and proper usage of the toilets built in remote
rural areas particularly in populous states like Uttar Pradesh.
Sewage systems
Sewage systems are
equally important as toilet construction. According to the Central Pollution
Control Board report, India has only 522 working
sewage treatment plants. Only around 37 percent of wards in urban areas
reported to have a proper liquid-waste disposal system for community and public
toilets as reported by the National Sample Survey Organization.
Solid waste management
With
rapid urbanization, solid-waste management remains as a key challenge in India.
377 million people in urban India generate 62 million tons of garbage daily,
making the country as the world’s third-largest garbage generator, after China
and the USA. Out of these, more than 45 million tons of garbage is left
untreated and disposed off by municipal authorities daily in an unhygienic
manner. At the national level, around 35 percent of India does not even have
waste dumps, let alone processing ability. Against a target of 30 percent, only
around 17 percent of urban solid-waste (garbage) was processed as of March 2016.
Even door-to-door trash collection in urban areas was around 42 percent against
a target of 50 percent.
What about water
The Union Budget
for the financial year 2017-18 has witnessed an increase of only Rs 50 crores
in the allocation for rural water. There was an expectation for higher
allocations considering the recent drought situation in the country which has further
worsened the drinking water crisis. In his Budget speech, the finance minister assured
that the open-defecation free villages would be prioritized for piped water
supply under the SBA though such meager budgetary allocations have raised
doubts about the intent. Earlier, in May, 2016 the Parliamentary Standing
Committee on Rural Development expressed its concern over the fallout of the decrease
in budgetary allocation for the rural drinking water programme. There are also
concerns regarding the quality of water. Despite the proposals to provide safe
drinking water to over 28,000 arsenic and fluoride affected areas in the next
four years, how the mission would get the success is anybody’s guess. The
government must take the stock of its progress in providing with safe drinking
water across social categories, gender and culture.
Conclusion
Do we still need to believe that the Swacch Bharat Abhiyan is all about cleanliness
all around and for the improvement of the living conditions of the common
citizens? To promote Swachh Bharat
widely across India, Modi government spent tax payers’ money to the tune of Rs
212.57 crore in 2014-15 and, in 2015-16, the expenses rose to Rs
293.14 crore. Though India is lagging behind on Swacch Bharat plan and its effective execution, but its
advertisement expenditure does not fall short of being on the higher side.
Until the Swacch Bharat Mission would
comply with the popular expectation rather than the over ambition of the
government, its inclusion in the priority list for National Health Mission
remains invalid.

Modi is very good in marketing, he is promoting all old products as a new brand and wasting the money of tax payers for his own interest and ultimately trying to make MODI as big brand, only appropriate time will expose him.
ReplyDeleteNice informative writing..
ReplyDeleteInformative data,it should reach to the public also.
ReplyDeleteAppreciate the way this article meticulously unmasked the nasty truth behind the false promises of swacch Bharat. If available please share data what % of budget has been spent in advertising expenditures.
ReplyDelete