Comprehensive Healthcare

Words: Dr Sanjeev RASTOGI

In the 1950s, the World Health Organisation [WHO], the apex organisation for global health, defined health as “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.”

Indeed, there is considerable evidence, modern western medicine included, that suggests a strong link between physical and psychological aspects of health and disease. Physical symptoms sometimes have psychological origins. The mental and physical aspects of health are complexly intertwined not only as a subject of study in medicine, but also in our daily lives.

Following the WHO definition, health may be defined as the outcome of multiple factors operating at various levels. Good health permits the optimal utilisation of one’s physical and mental abilities for one’s own good as well as for society. This means that health cannot be tackled as an isolated subject of action; there are so many factors affecting it — from socioeconomic determinants to gender, caste, regional and other inequalities — and, these must be addressed if one is to improve people’s health.

Today, this definition of health is being challenged as utopian and there is a move to develop what is described as a more practical and workable definition that focuses on certain “key indicators.”

The Original Healthcare Model: Its Status Today

The ideas expressed by the WHO in the 1970s were recognised decades earlier, at the time India was developing its health system. The healthcare model adopted by India after Independence is based on the recommendations of various committees commissioned to shape the country’s healthcare system. These committees called for the integration of various components of healthcare.

The Bhore Committee called for a social orientation of medical practice with public participation, an emphasis on preventive medicine and the consequent development of environmental health, in 1946. It envisioned the doctor of the future as a social doctor who could combine curative and preventive measures. It emphasises on the socialisation of medicine through primary healthcare long before it was conceived by the WHO and expressed in its Alma Ata declaration.

Despite the holistic views expressed at the time health policies and programmes being developed, India’s healthcare policy largely remained a curative policy with a secondary emphasis on prevention and on the socioeconomic issues that affect health outcomes. The health system’s focus on cure resulted in the development of high technology, cost-intensive procedures in the private and the public sectors. This has ensured that the healthcare system is a profit-making industry that is meant for the use of the rich and inaccessible to the underprivileged.

More than six decades have gone by since the Bhore committee’s recommendations. A look back allows us evaluate the successes and failures of the policy.

The results are described in the mission statement of the National Rural Health Mission [NRHM] in 2005. It highlights various regional inequalities, the lack of integration of sanitation, hygiene, nutrition and safe drinking water into health plans, and the lack of efficiency, accountability and effectiveness in existing programmes. It also notes that curative services favour the better-off. The average Indian is often forced to borrow money in order to pay for healthcare. The states with the largest share of the population have the worst healthcare systems.

However, three years after the launch of the NRHM, we are far from the targets it set for 2012. For example, three years after its introduction in Uttar Pradesh in 2006, and with an investment of over `3,000 crore, health standards in the state have not improved substantially. The infant mortality rate, the maternal mortality ratio, vaccination coverage and percentage of institutional delivery were a few key health indicators where the NRHM was supposed to concentrate, with targets fixed for 2012. Nearly halfway through the NRHM’s term, the only standard that has improved is the percentage of institutional deliveries.

India is blessed with capable doctors. It also has human resources involved in the form of consultants and paramedics. Apart from state-owned services, private institutions provide healthcare to our country. There is no shortage of money: the various healthcare programmes do not face funding problems. We have the skills, the infrastructure and the money. However, despite such infrastructural strengths and the financial support, the modern healthcare system has failed to reach the people and provide healthcare services to the needy.

We require a system of effective healthcare delivery to optimally utilise available resources for our own people — one that enables them to enjoy the all-encompassing definition of health described by the WHO.

The diversity in almost every domain throughout the country argues for a flexible planning approach suited to various needs. There are substantial regional, social, economic and gender inequalities affecting access to education, work and healthcare and, therefore, health. While India faces an epidemic of metabolic, cardiovascular, degenerative and other non-communicable illnesses, communicable diseases still are major causes for morbidity and mortality. We also need to care about the physical and mental impact of industrialisation and globalisation. Any expenditure in health should be considered an investment and not expenditure.

Integrated Definition Of Health

It is interesting that the WHO’s integrated definition of health was actually articulated 2,000 years ago. Susruta defined health as a physiological balance added to a psycho-sensual happiness. The mere absence of disease in a person does not bring happiness. Better health is expressed not in terms of a longer life, but in terms of a better quality of life. Health has socioeconomic determinants. Curative practices must be accompanied by preventive measures.

Susruta goes further: health is also affected by one’s moral, social and spiritual values. Ayurveda holds that dharma [spiritual gains], artha [monetary gains], kama [sensual gains] and moksha [liberation], the four primary objectives of human life, are possible only for a healthy human being.

Healthy people are a prerequisite to optimise human resource utilisation. An ideal healthcare system, as defined by Ayurveda, is one which cures a disease without causing, or precipitating other illness [Shamyet yo na kopyet].

We all know about the benefits of preventive medicine. Thousands of years ago, Ayurveda pointed out the importance of a preventive over a curative approach, because it has the impact for many generations.

Ayurveda also had views on how individuals should be involved in their own health and healthcare. The cultivation of health becomes the responsibility of the individual, not of the institution. Every means of promoting preventive health should involve the people, not merely as passive recipients of plans, but also as the active controllers of their own health by the utilisation of resources available to them. The state’s responsibility is to make them aware of the ways of achieving good health — encompassing the role of a co-ordinator, motivator and facilitator, and not merely the sole custodian of preventive health for the people.

Systems such as Ayurveda, unani, siddha, yoga and nature cure have been practised for centuries and their impact upon health is well known. They are incorporated in household remedies. They are also used extensively where state healthcare services are not available, or affordable.

Every healthcare system has its limitations and advantages. There are conditions where some, or the other system, may work better than the other, if tried early in the course of illness.

The modern system of medicine forms the basis of the healthcare infrastructure in India with a majority of the budget allocated to it. Unfortunately, this neglects the holistic approach to medicine. Further, it has failed to make a substantial difference to people’s health.

Not much concrete action has been taken to incorporate other systems of medicine into the healthcare system and to support them. For example, an observation of Ayurveda hospitals presents a pathetic picture of their status. Ayurveda hospitals in Uttar Pradesh have less than one per cent hospital occupancy ratio and no one has seriously considered why this is the case.

NRHM has made a progressive move by looking to mainstream AYUSH [Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy] and to bringing their advantages to millions. Ayurveda has been identified for a few practices like panchakarma and ksharsutra therapy, which are supposed to be beneficial for neuromuscular and ano-rectal diseases, respectively.

Conclusion

Healthcare in India should operate on a need-based strategy. This should evaluate the utility of advancements in healthcare, but also simultaneously take care for not devaluing the essentials of traditional healthcare fundamentals. A serious effort is required to improving healthcare by the utilisation of traditional skills juxtaposed by the technological breakthrough made in modern science.

Dr SANJEEV RASTOGI, MD [Ayurveda], PhD, Department of Kaya Chikitsa, State Ayurvedic College and Hospital,Tulsi Das Marg, Lucknow, UP, India. This article [Ayurveda for Comprehensive Healthcare] was first published in Indian Journal of Medical Ethics [Vol VI Issue 2 April-June 2009], under the Creative Commons license 4.0.

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