The burden of non-communicable, tertiary diseases in India is increasing as its population of prosperous and aged people increases. Private health insurance is largely limited to upper middle class patients, while publicly financed health insurance has failed to attract lower-income patients. New evidence from the Aarogyasri Programme in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, suggests that community networks may provide an important channel to disseminate information and encourage take up of public health insurance
Background To reduce the burden of out-of-pocket payments on households in India, the government has...
Providing quality health services to everyone and everywhere is the dream of many countries and Indi...
Poor quality care in public sector hospitals coupled with the costs of care in the private sector ha...
In the mid-2000s, India began rolling out large-scale, publicly-financed health insurance schemes mo...
The Indian health system is mainly funded by out-of-pocket payments. More than 80% of health care ex...
Health is deemed central to a nation’s development. Accordingly, health care reform and expansion ar...
This paper is a qualitative assessment of a public health insurance scheme in the state of Andhra Pr...
In India, a substantial investment has been made in developing community-based programmes, such as I...
Successive Governments of India have promised to transform India's unsatisfactory health-care system...
With ongoing demographic transition, epidemiological transition has been emerged as a growing conce...
The public health spending in India has been hovering around 1% of gross domestic produc...
BACKGROUND: Families living below the poverty line in countries which do not have universal healthca...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the Self Employed Women's Association's Medical Insurance Fund in Gujarat in te...
Crippling out of pocket health expenditure and lack of access to health care among the poor are sign...
Pragyan Monalisa Sahoo,1 Himanshu Sekhar Rout,2 Mihajlo Jakovljevic3–51Department of Anal...
Background To reduce the burden of out-of-pocket payments on households in India, the government has...
Providing quality health services to everyone and everywhere is the dream of many countries and Indi...
Poor quality care in public sector hospitals coupled with the costs of care in the private sector ha...
In the mid-2000s, India began rolling out large-scale, publicly-financed health insurance schemes mo...
The Indian health system is mainly funded by out-of-pocket payments. More than 80% of health care ex...
Health is deemed central to a nation’s development. Accordingly, health care reform and expansion ar...
This paper is a qualitative assessment of a public health insurance scheme in the state of Andhra Pr...
In India, a substantial investment has been made in developing community-based programmes, such as I...
Successive Governments of India have promised to transform India's unsatisfactory health-care system...
With ongoing demographic transition, epidemiological transition has been emerged as a growing conce...
The public health spending in India has been hovering around 1% of gross domestic produc...
BACKGROUND: Families living below the poverty line in countries which do not have universal healthca...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the Self Employed Women's Association's Medical Insurance Fund in Gujarat in te...
Crippling out of pocket health expenditure and lack of access to health care among the poor are sign...
Pragyan Monalisa Sahoo,1 Himanshu Sekhar Rout,2 Mihajlo Jakovljevic3–51Department of Anal...
Background To reduce the burden of out-of-pocket payments on households in India, the government has...
Providing quality health services to everyone and everywhere is the dream of many countries and Indi...
Poor quality care in public sector hospitals coupled with the costs of care in the private sector ha...