Overview
India’s public‑health agenda aims to achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC). Recent flagship schemes – the Ayushman Bharat Health and Wellness Centres (AB‑HWC) and the Ayushman Bharat Digital Health Mission (ABDHM) – were launched to strengthen infrastructure and create digital records. However, critics argue that both programmes have failed to improve real‑world access to affordable care.
Key Developments
- 2018: Existing Primary Health Centres (PHCs), Community Health Centres (CHCs) and Health Sub‑centres (SCs) were re‑branded with the prefix “Health and Wellness Centre”.
- 2022: ABDHM introduced the ABHA card to create a digital repository of every citizen’s health data.
- Budget allocation of roughly ₹300 crore per year for ABDHM despite limited evidence of measurable health outcomes.
- Persistent gaps in public‑sector quality and private‑sector affordability continue to restrict access.
Important Facts
The re‑branding created confusion among health workers about the exact mandate of each facility. The shift from population‑level health promotion to individual well‑being is hard to measure because well‑being is subjective. No universally accepted metrics exist for well‑being at the national level, making performance monitoring difficult.
ABDHM’s digital platform records individual health histories, facility locations, and provider credentials, but it does not address the shortage of functional facilities or the cost barrier faced by the poor. Existing data sources already capture similar information, raising questions about the added value of a massive new database.
Exam Relevance
Understanding these schemes is essential for GS3 (Health) and GS4 (Ethics) questions on policy design, implementation challenges, and equity. Aspirants should be able to discuss:
- The difference between healt