What is health failure?? Explain in detail..
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when a person became ill or going to die because of any whether physical, mental or social cause is known as health failure.
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THE Sindh budget tells us how poorly the provincial government intends to use the people’s money. It is evident that there are clear gaps in planning; thereby making it important to establish whether the stated priorities match what is reflected in the budget. For a party that has been in power for the last decade, the PPP has failed to improve governance and uplift the province — particularly in the health sector.
Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah proposed the allocation of Rs100.32 billion for health in 2017-18, an increase of 26 per cent over 2016-17’s Rs79.88bn. There has also been an increase in the amount spent on staff salaries. However, health services for the common people of the province remain underfunded. Although the increase in salaries, incorporation of 25,000 employees in the Lady Health Worker Programme and the construction of new dispensaries are positive steps, why have we been unable to see the impact of similar measures over the years?
One need not look further than the crisis in Tharparkar, where women and children suffer from iron-deficiency anaemia, malnutrition, measles and diarrhoea, or the several district and tehsil headquarter hospitals that face a severe shortage in technical staff and doctors, including gynaecologists and paediatricians. The fact that private pathology labs now proliferate outside public hospitals indicates that either certain diagnostic services are unavailable or that their results are not trusted, even by the hospitals’ own physicians.
Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah proposed the allocation of Rs100.32 billion for health in 2017-18, an increase of 26 per cent over 2016-17’s Rs79.88bn. There has also been an increase in the amount spent on staff salaries. However, health services for the common people of the province remain underfunded. Although the increase in salaries, incorporation of 25,000 employees in the Lady Health Worker Programme and the construction of new dispensaries are positive steps, why have we been unable to see the impact of similar measures over the years?
One need not look further than the crisis in Tharparkar, where women and children suffer from iron-deficiency anaemia, malnutrition, measles and diarrhoea, or the several district and tehsil headquarter hospitals that face a severe shortage in technical staff and doctors, including gynaecologists and paediatricians. The fact that private pathology labs now proliferate outside public hospitals indicates that either certain diagnostic services are unavailable or that their results are not trusted, even by the hospitals’ own physicians.
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