One of Narendra Modi’s campaign promises last year was to give “high priority” to the health sector, promising to unroll a universal health assurance plan before his term ends.
But shortly before celebrating his first year in office, Prime Minister Narendra Modi asked for a massive cutback in the proposed budget to roll out his ambitious universal health care plan, after estimates pegged total costs at $18.5 billion over five years.
Modi still has four years to deliver on his promise. But with the first two proposed budgets both sent to the chopping block, and India’s main health department receiving a meager 2 percent rise in funding, workers in the health care sector are left wondering: How will the government fund and actually deliver not just its national health policy but also universal health coverage?