THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 03 October 2018 (A Cure Called Inclusion)


A Cure Called Inclusion


Mains Paper: 2 | Health 
Prelims level: Not so important  
Mains level: Their marginalization affects the health of tribal communities. 

Introduction 

  • A report in this newspaper drew attention to the findings of an Expert Committee on Tribal Health appointed five years ago by the Ministries of Health and Family Welfare and Tribal Development. 
  • The report revealed that tribal communities lag behind the general population on most health parameters. 
  • Health is an under-discussed matter, both for the country’s political class and a significant section of its civil society. 
  • Discussions on health-related problems of tribals, minorities and Dalits are even rarer, both in the corridors of power and within the educated social class of the country.

Important highlights of this report 

  • Health is an interplay of a number of social, political, cultural, environmental and genetic factors.
  • It is important to identify the missing links in this sad story of tribal health in India. 
  • According to the 2011 census, Scheduled Tribes form 8.6 per cent of the country’s populations. 
  • Many of these tribes live in the most inaccessible geographical regions of the country.
  • In a study, published in The Lancet in May, India ranked 145 among 195 countries in terms of healthcare accessibility behind Bangladesh and Bhutan.

Factors depends on healthcare access 

  • Access to healthcare depends on a number of factors of which female literacy is an important determinant.
  • It is instrumental in shaping a group’s healthcare seeking behaviour. 
  • According to the 2011 Census, the female literacy of Scheduled Tribes is 56.5 per cent; this is almost 10 per cent below the national rate and is one reason for tribal groups doing poorly on health parameters. 
  • Financial insecurity is another major cause of the ill-health of tribal people. 
  • It is no accident that a majority of hunger deaths reported in the country in the past five years happened to be of members of Scheduled Tribes.

Health care situations around the world 

  • The poor health of an ethnic group is very often a result of the exclusion of that group from a country’s national imagination. 
  • The infant mortality rate of native North Americans and Alaskan natives, both underprivileged groups in the US, is 60 per cent higher than that of the Caucasians. 
  • According to 2012 figures, more than 6 per cent people from these groups suffer tuberculosis compared to 0.8 per cent for the US’s white population.
  • A poll conducted by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Harvard T H Chan School of Public Health revealed that about a quarter of Native Americans experienced discrimination when consulting a doctor or a health clinic. 
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australia are also known to have poorer health compared to other Australians. 
  • Exclusion and marginalisation of a group leads to poverty, which in turn makes people from such groups vulnerable to diseases. 
  • This holds true for India’s Scheduled Tribes as well. 
  • Ending the marginalisation of tribal communities should then be at the heart of all government and civil society efforts to improve the health of people from tribal communities.
  • The healthcare facts in India among the tribal communities 
  • Universal healthcare is much more than providing infrastructure or alleviating specific health disorders through national programmes. 
  • It requires correction of a number of social parameters that govern health. Besides government apathy, problems specific to some tribal groups contribute to their poor health statistics. 
  • A 2004 study in Jhagram block of West Bengal’s Medinipur district, for example, showed that 63.6 per cent Santhal (a Scheduled Tribe) mothers were aware of family planning measures, as compared to 87 per cent non-Santhal women. 
  • Scheduled Tribe communities are known to be vulnerable to specific diseases  people of Odisha’s Gond tribe, for example, are susceptible to sickle cell disease.

Conclusion 

  • Improving the health of Scheduled Tribes requires a multi-pronged approach. 
  • An honest attempts at inclusion  politically, administratively and socially  should be behind all such endeavours.
  • Measures to tackle group specific health issues and capacity building of a group would go a long way in promoting their health.

Online Coaching for UPSC PRE Exam

General Studies Pre. Cum Mains Study Materials

UPSC Prelims Questions: 

Q.1) Mission Parivar Vikas aims to:
(a) improve access to family planning services.
(b) ensure livelihood opportunities for the next generation of a family.
(c) enhance assets of a family to improve income security.
(d) provide health insurance to at least one person of a household.
Answer:  A

UPSC Mains Questions:
Q.1)  What are the factors responsible for the healthcare situation among the tribal communities is not performing well? How it can be improve?