PHA-Exchange> (no subject)

Dr Qasem Chowdhury gksavar at citechco.net
Mon Mar 25 22:27:59 PST 2002


World Bank Induced Primary Health Care User Fees in Punjab, India

Sign on campaign demanding abolition of User Fee charges for the poor in
World Bank funded state health sector in Punjab, India

In the mid 1990s, the World Bank provided a loan to India to create the
Punjab Health Systems Corporation (PHSC). At the time, the Bank claimed the
program would promote transparency, accountability, and efficiency in the
health care system; and that the project would pay significant attention to
the needs of women and the poor. In reality, the project has far from lived
up to intentions. Most significantly, the PHSC project mandated the
application of user fee charges to those in need of medical services
regardless of patients' income levels. Marginalized groups, chiefly the
poor and women, have faced severe hardship in receiving medical attention,
because they cannot afford to pay the user fee charges as required for
health assistance.

In theory, the poor are exempt from the user fees charged for medical care.
However, exemption mechanisms have failed to ensure the poor and women's
access to health care in Punjab, as well as in other Indian states that
have implemented similar World Bank projects. Exemption entitlements have
also been ineffective and counterproductive in Mali, Zimbabwe, and Ghana
where World Bank sponsored user fees have also been imposed.

In the case of the Punjab Health Systems Corporation, poorer patients must
request a 'yellow card' from the government in order to have the user fees
waived. Yet most poor patients are not even aware of the exemption card. If
they are aware, then the complex and costly procedures required to obtain
and retain their exempt status still excludes most of them from receiving
medical attention. As a result, they have to pay a user fee in addition to
bribes (to doctors, nurses, and other hospital staff) so that they might be
treated. In early 2001, only 44 'yellow cards' were distributed in a city
of about 270,000. This has led many poor people to seek medical care from
unqualified persons, using superstitious methods of treating medical problems.
Therefore, INSAAF International in India has launched a campaign, forcing
the World Bank and PHSC to acknowledge and rectify the vast gap between
their stated policy goals and the realities of its implementation.

Moreover, in September 2001, after years of pressure by NGOs and citizen
groups, the World Bank was forced to change its policy on user fees, to
forbid the imposition of user fees on access to primary health care. This
change in policy must be applied to all of the World Bank's existing and
previous projects, such as the PHSC project in Punjab.

In February 2002, INSAAF International released a report documenting the
effects of the World Bank sponsored corporatization of Punjab's health care
system. India Together, a web magazine has summarized the report in the
adjoining article, "Yellow Cards for the Poor".

http://www.indiatogether.org/health/reports/insaaf01.htm

Please support INSAAF International's efforts by participating in a
signature campaign for the letter being sent to the World Bank and the PHSC.

- Vineeta Gupta, General Secretary, Insaaf International,
vineetag at sancharnet.in
-----------------
LETTER
Please send your sign - ons to Shrayas Jatkar at shrayas at econjustice.net

Mr. James Wolfensohn
President
World Bank
1818 H Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20433
U.S.A

Special Secretary Health cum Managing Director
Punjab Health Systems Corporation,
S.C.O 341-42, Sector 34A
Chandigarh, INDIA 160022

Dear Sirs,

The orders of the World Bank-funded Punjab Health Systems Corporation
(PHSC), Punjab, India to hike the user fee for health services and
elimination of subsidized fee structure for low income group is clearly
another example of the insidious World Bank strategy of charging the poor
when in fact its mission should be to deliver them services they could not
otherwise afford.

India is a welfare state, and the National Health Policy (NHP) emphasizes
the role of the state in providing basic health care. The objectives stated
in the project under which PHSC was created were to improve efficiency in
allocation and use of health resources through policy and institutional
development, improve the performance of the health care system, increase
coverage and effectiveness of services at the primary and secondary levels,
and to better serve the neediest sections of the population. But
practically it is resulting in denial of the right to health and
undermining state responsibility in providing basic health care to its
citizens. The poor and women are worst hit with the increased costs of the
treatment.

This is being done at a time when even the U.S. Congress has passed
legislation that strongly opposes this practice and when the World Bank
itself supposedly opposes user fees on primary health care. We strongly
condemn PHSC for its anti poor and anti women policies.
We demand that these orders be reversed immediately.

Sincerely,
Dr. Vineeta Gupta
General secretary, INSAAF International,
Punjab, India
Email guptahr at yahoo.com

Please add your name to the letter by sending your sign-on to
shrayas at econjustice.net

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