Dr. Harsh Vardhan Requests Chief Ministers of All States For Their Cooperation To Set Up Super-speciality Hospitals Modelled on All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) In Their States

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Dr Harsh Vardhan, Union Health and Family Welfare Minister, has decided to request the Chief Ministers of all states for their cooperation to set up super-speciality hospitals modelled on All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in their states.

In the first phase, six AIIMS have come up at Bhopal, Bhubaneswar, Jodhpur, Patna, Raipur and Rishikesh. They have all begun partial operations in giving tertiary health care as well as quality under-graduate and post-graduate medical education.

Dr Harsh Vardhan reviewed the progress of implementation of the new AIIMS projects with their Directors yesterday. The meeting, which lasted about three hours, was marked by a free exchange of views on the status of the project with respect to their construction and civil works, procurement of equipment, and recruitment of faculty and doctors.

Stressing that he was prepared to take radical steps to ensure timely implementation of the six ongoing AIIMS project, the Health Minister asked the directors to submit within a week detailed status reports. Their reports would have the benefit of guiding the Ministry’s officials in the future implementation of new AIIMS projects. He assured the Directors that if necessary he would speak to the concerned Chief Ministers on ways to remove bottlenecks to speedy completion. Most importantly, the Health Minister offered to increase their powers to take on-the-spot decisions to address situations on the field to avoid bureaucratic delays.

The Health Minister has directed the Ministry’s officers to establish schools of public health in all the six new AIIMS. Presently, the International School of Public Health is functional only in AIIMS-Jodhpur and AIIMS-Raipur in partnership with Harvard School of Public Health.

Offer to States

Dr Harsh Vardhan said the Centre would consider having more AIIMS projects if the chief ministers show interest. In this connection he mentioned that in 2013, the West Bengal government in 2013 had expressed its inability to acquire land for a project to have an AIIMS in Raigunj which was earlier approved. However, subsequently Chief Minister Sushri Mamata Banerjee had suggested that it would be better if an AIIMS was established at either Siliguri or in Coochbehar. Dr Harsh Vardhan said he would be happy to review the suggestion.

“Land acquisition should not be a problem for a hospital because it is for a public purpose. Moreover it would be a government-run free facility and no private company would make profits. So I would request all chief ministers to avail this opportunity,” the Minister said.

AIIMS, apart from bridging the yawning gap between hospital beds and demand for them (less than 1 per 1,000 population) could also develop more doctors and paramedics. The doctor-population ratio in India is at present 1 to 1,800 whereas World Health Organisation has stipulated a minimum of 1 to 1,100.

“The common experience is that most doctors are unwilling to serve in rural areas. On the other hand doctors from small towns and villages are forced to find employment in big cities where they take years to establish themselves. But once super-speciality, AIIMS-like government hospitals come up in district towns, the needs of both the population and doctors could be served,” the Health Minister said.

In south India, however, the experience is different, the Minister stated. Medical treatment of the best standard is given free in hospitals run by the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanam, Satya Sri Sai Baba Trust and Mata Amritanandamayi Math. Significantly, these hospitals have medical colleges as adjuncts where admission is through competitive examinations, the Minister pointed out.

Dr Harsh Vardhan said the south Indian model holds out an example for the northern states where medical facilities for the poor are still scarce. Opening an AIIMS without having in place a workable model would sometimes be akin to placing the cart before the horse, he said. But the poor and middle class cannot be ill-served indefinitely. Therefore he would consult the state health ministers on ways to collect local synergies, he added.

“The time has come for out-of-the-box solutions to problems wracking our public health sector. The message I will carry to my colleague health ministers in the states and the chief ministers is that not providing health care to the poor is not an option for the Narendra Modi government. If we put our heads together we will find a solution. So let us work,” the Health Minister said.

Source: Press Information Bureau

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