[Answered] Examine India’s transition from curative to preventive healthcare. Evaluate the importance of data-driven systems and a skilled workforce in addressing evolving health challenges.

Introduction

NCDs now account for over 60% of all deaths in India, yet preventive healthcare receives only 10–15% of total health spending. Budget 2026–27 allocates ₹1,06,530 crore to MoHFW, a 10% rise but public health spending at 2% of GDP remains well short of the National Health Policy 2017’s 2.5% target.

Examining the Curative-to-Preventive Transition

  1. Ayushman Bharat (2018): 1.5 lakh Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs) renamed Ayushman Arogya Mandirs, reoriented PHCs from maternal-child health toward comprehensive preventive screening: NCD screening, mental health, palliative care. A structural pivot on paper.
  2. National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, CVD and Stroke (NPCDCS): District-level screening, operational but underfunded; many Ayushman Arogya Mandirs receive just ₹1.8 lakh annually (NITI Aayog critique, 2026), insufficient for genuine preventive outreach.
  3. Poshan 2.0, Fit India Movement, Jal Jeevan Mission: Multi-sectoral prevention nutrition, physical activity, safe water, but implementation remains siloed with no convergent budgetary framework.

Importance of Preventive Healthcare

  1. Economic Efficiency: Preventive care reduces out-of-pocket expenditure (OOP) (~48% of total health spending). Early screening lowers long-term treatment costs for diseases like diabetes, cancer, and hypertension.
  2. Social Equity: Preventive services at primary level improve access for rural and marginalised populations. HWCs provide free essential diagnostics, reducing healthcare inequality.
  3. Public Health Resilience: Lessons from COVID-19 emphasised surveillance, vaccination, and preparedness. Preventive systems strengthen response to pandemics and climate-linked health risks.

Role of Data-Driven Systems

  1. Digital Health Infrastructure: Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) creates interoperable digital health records. Unique Health IDs enable continuity of care and targeted interventions.
  2. Disease Surveillance & Analytics: Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP) enhanced with AI for real-time outbreak tracking. Data analytics helps identify regional disease patterns and risk factors.
  3. Targeted Policy Design: Use of big data supports precision public health—e.g., district-level nutrition and TB interventions. NITI Aayog emphasises data governance frameworks for evidence-based policymaking.

Skilled Workforce Backbone of Preventive Care

  1. Expanding Human Resources: India has ~1 doctor per 1,500 people (below WHO norms). Focus shifting to multi-tier workforce, community Health Officers (CHOs) at HWCs and ASHA and Anganwadi workers for grassroots outreach.
  2. Skill Diversification: Preventive care requires public health specialists, epidemiologists, data scientists. New domains: digital health management, telemedicine, health informatics.
  3. Capacity Building Initiatives: National Health Mission training programs. Expansion of medical colleges (Budget 2026–27 focus). Public-private partnerships in skill development.
  4. Persistent Gaps: Urban-rural disparity in workforce distribution. Brain drain of skilled professionals. Limited focus on preventive medicine in curricula.

Challenges

  1. Demographic Pressure Upcoming Storm: India will have 190 million people aged 60+ by 2030 (MoSPI projection), each carrying an average of one chronic disease (NITI Aayog Ageing Report 2023).
  2. Equipment Crisis: 70–80% of advanced medical devices are imported (NITI Aayog), a preventive system dependent on expensive imported diagnostics is neither equitable nor financially sustainable.
  3. Data Interoperability gap: ABDM, IHIP, PM-JAY claims data, and PLFS health data remain in separate silos, a unified national health dashboard for predictive analytics does not yet exist.
  4. Rural Digital Exclusion: Telemedicine (eSanjeevani, 34 crore consultations to date) cannot reach the last mile without connectivity infrastructure; only 10% of CHCs have reliable broadband (NHP 2023).
  5. The Workforce Crisis: India’s doctor-population ratio: 1:834 (NHP 2023), better than WHO’s 1:1,000 benchmark nationally, but 1:2,000 in rural areas, preventive healthcare at community level is impossible without accessible human contact.
  6. The Frontline Worker Paradox: ASHA workers, Anganwadi workers, and ANMs, 10 lakh+ frontline health workers are the actual delivery mechanism for preventive health. Yet they remain inadequately remunerated, undertrained, and overloaded (NITI Aayog Budget analysis 2026).

Way Forward

  1. Fully integrate Ayushman Bharat with National Digital Health Mission for seamless data flow.
  2. Scale competency-based training for CHOs and mid-level providers.
  3. Link preventive care with social determinants through convergence with nutrition and sanitation schemes.
  4. Establish a National Preventive Health Authority for coordinated policy and monitoring.
  5. Leverage private sector and technology for scalable screening and awareness campaigns.

Conclusion

As A.P.J. Abdul Kalam emphasised, Healthcare must reach the last person; India’s preventive, data-driven and skilled workforce approach can transform health security into a foundation for inclusive development.

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