Social Sciences, asked by sauravh, 1 year ago

what is the indias international policy for health

Answers

Answered by sap000006
0
India has fallen behind in both health expenditure and health outcomes compared to other lower-middle-income countries. Its burdens of tuberculosis and malaria, and increasingly noncommunicable diseases like diabetes, are among the largest. Infant mortality and child malnutrition rates rival those in sub-Saharan Africa. Public expenditure on health—a mere 1.2 percent of GDP—is less than one-third of South Africa’s and share of out-of-pocket cost is the highest among G-20 countries. On the other hand, India’s thriving medical tourism industrygenerates revenues of over $70 billion a year—that’s equivalent to one-third of all public expenditure on health in India. It’s clear there’s a high level of inequity in health access and outcomes that must be remedied as a matter of priority.



sauravh: you have copied it from google
Answered by rajat2269
0

Answer:

All Indian citizens can get free outpatient and inpatient care at government facilities. Under India's decentralized approach to health care delivery, the states are primarily responsible for organizing health services.

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