What is DigiYatra?
DigiYatra is an industry-led initiative coordinated by the Ministry of Civil Aviation in line with Digital India programme.
It aims to transform the flying experience for passengers and position Indian Aviation amongst the most innovative aviation networks in the world.
The facility will use digital technology to enhance air passenger experience all the way from ticket booking to airport entry check, security check and aircraft boarding.
DigiYatra is an industry-led initiative coordinated by the Ministry of Civil Aviation in line with Digital India programme.
It aims to transform the flying experience for passengers and position Indian Aviation amongst the most innovative aviation networks in the world.
The facility will use digital technology to enhance air passenger experience all the way from ticket booking to airport entry check, security check and aircraft boarding.
The public-private gap in health care
#KarpathuIAS
• There are huge technological gaps in government hospitals which have since the 1980s.
• NITI Aayog’s Three Year Action Agenda recommends the government to focus on preventive care rather than curative care.
• It advises the government to play the role of regulating the health sector rather than focusing on providing health care.
• This means the system of private health care for those who can afford it and government care for those who cannot will continue.
Initiatives taken by Government
• The new Ayushman Bharat health scheme to provide secondary and tertiary care to socioeconomically deprived has a cap of ₹5 lakh per family per year.
• However, Human organ transplants cannot be achieved in this amount.
• Transplanting a human organ is not a single event, but a life-long process.
• Transplantation needs expensive infrastructure and trained human resources.
What are the Problems?
• Today, Health care in India is obviously not egalitarian and equitable.
• Governments have been giving subsidies to private players, especially to corporate hospitals.
• Private hospital chains in India have entered every segment of medical care, including primary and secondary care and diagnostics.
• Most have large investors from abroad and some are effectively controlled by foreign investors.
• Governments have been increasingly dependent on the private sector to deliver health care.
Is there any feasible solution to overcome?
• Inequitable distribution of medical services has led to distrust of the public in government hospitals.
• The poor expect to get from them what the rich get in private hospitals which is not possible with present policies.
• The morale among medical personnel in public hospitals is low.
• The perception that doctors in the private sector are much better than those in the public sector has effected the professional image of medical personnel in public hospitals.
• Every possible medical intervention should be available to every citizen.
#KarpathuIAS
• There are huge technological gaps in government hospitals which have since the 1980s.
• NITI Aayog’s Three Year Action Agenda recommends the government to focus on preventive care rather than curative care.
• It advises the government to play the role of regulating the health sector rather than focusing on providing health care.
• This means the system of private health care for those who can afford it and government care for those who cannot will continue.
Initiatives taken by Government
• The new Ayushman Bharat health scheme to provide secondary and tertiary care to socioeconomically deprived has a cap of ₹5 lakh per family per year.
• However, Human organ transplants cannot be achieved in this amount.
• Transplanting a human organ is not a single event, but a life-long process.
• Transplantation needs expensive infrastructure and trained human resources.
What are the Problems?
• Today, Health care in India is obviously not egalitarian and equitable.
• Governments have been giving subsidies to private players, especially to corporate hospitals.
• Private hospital chains in India have entered every segment of medical care, including primary and secondary care and diagnostics.
• Most have large investors from abroad and some are effectively controlled by foreign investors.
• Governments have been increasingly dependent on the private sector to deliver health care.
Is there any feasible solution to overcome?
• Inequitable distribution of medical services has led to distrust of the public in government hospitals.
• The poor expect to get from them what the rich get in private hospitals which is not possible with present policies.
• The morale among medical personnel in public hospitals is low.
• The perception that doctors in the private sector are much better than those in the public sector has effected the professional image of medical personnel in public hospitals.
• Every possible medical intervention should be available to every citizen.
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Karpathu IAS
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https://unacademy.com/lesson/buddhism-in-tamil-nadu-in-tamil/lesson/buddhism-in-tamil-nadu-in-tamil/9R90GJIE
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