PM Narendra Modi was at the first-ever high-level meeting on Universal Health Coverage in New York today.
New York: India's experience and capabilities in providing affordable healthcare is available for use to all developing countries, Prime Minister Narendra Modi told the first-ever high-level meeting on Universal Health Coverage in New York today, underscoring that a healthy life is the right of every person.
Addressing the meeting, Prime Minister Modi said: "Health does not simply mean freedom from diseases. A healthy life is everyone persons' right."
"The onus for this is on our government to make every possible effort to ensure this," PM Modi said at the meeting, which will launch new efforts to provide access for all to affordable, inclusive and resilient health systems.
While the United Nations has set a deadline of 2030 in its Sustainable Development Goals to ending the TB epidemic, PM Modi said the target year that India has set for itself to end TB is five years ahead of the UN deadline.
"We have set this target in mission mode in 2025. I'm fully confident that we will be able to achieve this target," he said adding that a campaign has also been started against diseases that spread due to air pollution and through animals.
PM Modi said India's efforts on affordable healthcare are not limited to just its own boundaries.
"We have helped to provide access to affordable healthcare by way of telemedicine to several other countries especially African countries and we will continue to do so. Our experience and our capabilities are available for use to all developing countries," he added.
PM Modi began his engagements at the 74th Session of the UN General Assembly by addressing the Climate Action Summit hosted by Secretary General Antonio Guterres today in the General Assembly Hall. This was followed by his speech at the Universal Health Coverage meeting.
PM Modi told the world leaders and ministers at the summit that the global welfare begins with people's welfare, and health is an important component of it and added that India has taken a holistic approach towards the health sector.
He outlined the four main pillars of healthcare that India focuses on.
"The first pillar is preventive healthcare. We have laid special emphasis on yoga, ayurveda and fitness," he said adding that India is building more than 125,000 wellness centres and this focus has helped in controlling life style diseases such as diabetes, blood pressure and depression.
Voicing concern over the harmful effects of e-cigarettes, the PM said the "craze for e-cigarettes is a mater of concern for us" due to which India has banned the commodity to "save the youth from this very severe problem".
The second pillar for India is affordable healthcare and under this the government has rolled out the world's largest health insurance scheme -- Ayushman Bharat. Under this scheme, 500 million poor people have been given the facility of free treatment worth up to 500,000 rupees every year and last year alone, 4.5 million people have availed of this facility.
PM Modi said India has opened more than 5,000 special pharmacies where more than 800 varieties of vital medicines are available at affordable prices.
"The cost of stents for heart patients has been slashed by 80% and the cost of knee implants has been cut down by 50 to 70 per cent. Hundreds of thousands of kidney patients in India are also taking advantage of the free dialysis services provided by the government," he said.
For India, the third pillar is improvements on the supply side and the government has taken several "historic steps" for quality medical education and medical infrastructure development."
Highlighting the fourth pillar of "mission mode intervention", PM Modi said if mothers and children are healthy, this will lay the foundation for a healthy society.
"We have started the National Nutrition initiative in mission mode."
PM Modi ended his address using a Sanskrit quote -- "Sarve Bhvantu Sukhin, Sarv Santu Nirmaya" that translates into "wishing all happiness, wishing all a disease-free life."