Launched in 2018, this is the world’s largest government-funded healthcare program. It has evolved into a four-pillar structure:
| Pillar | Intervention | Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Pillar 1 | Ayushman Arogya Mandir | Upgrading 1.5 lakh+ SC/PHCs to provide Comprehensive Primary Healthcare (CPHC) including NCD screening. |
| Pillar 2 | PM-Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY) | Cashless cover of ₹5 lakh/family/year for secondary/tertiary care. New in 2024-25: Coverage extended to all seniors aged 70+ (Vay Vandana Card). |
| Pillar 3 | PM-AB Health Infrastructure Mission (PM-ABHIM) | A ₹64,000 Cr outlay to fill gaps in health infrastructure, surveillance, and research (2021-2026). |
| Pillar 4 | Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) | Creating a digital ecosystem (ABHA ID) for interoperable health records and tele-consultation (e-Sanjeevani). |
Pillar 1: Ayushman Arogya Mandir (AAM)
Formerly known as Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs).
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- The Concept:This is the foundation of the system. It shifts the focus of primary health from just “maternal and child health” to Comprehensive Primary Healthcare (CPHC).
- Expansion of Services:Unlike traditional dispensaries, AAMs provide a package of 12 essential services, including:
- Screening and management of Non-Communicable Diseases (Diabetes, Hypertension, Cancers).
- Mental health services and geriatric care.
- Free essential drugs and diagnostic services.
- Wellness Component:They integrate Yoga and AYUSH to promote preventive health, reducing the burden on big hospitals.
Pillar 2: PM-Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY)
The world’s largest government-funded health insurance scheme.
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- Financial Protection:Provides a health cover of ₹5 lakh per family per year for secondary and tertiary care hospitalization.(Covering over 50 crore people. It is considered the biggest insurance program in the world).
- Targeting:It is an entitlement-based scheme, originally targeting the bottom 40% of the population (approx. 12 crore families) based on SECS 2011 data.
- Key Features:Cashless and Paperless: Treatment at all empanelled public and private hospitals.
- Portability:A beneficiary from Bihar can receive treatment in Tamil Nadu.
- Vay Vandana Card (2024-25):A critical evolution where all citizens aged 70+ are covered regardless of income, addressing the challenges of an aging population.
Pillar 3: PM-AB Health Infrastructure Mission (PM-ABHIM)
The “Hardware” of the health system.
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- The Objective:Launched post-pandemic to fill the critical gaps in health infrastructure and bio-security.
- Surveillance:Setting up integrated public health labs in all districts and “One Health” institutes to track zoonotic diseases (diseases jumping from animals to humans).
- Emergency Care:Developing critical care hospital blocks in over 600 districts to ensure that “emergency” care doesn’t require traveling to a metro city.
- Research:Strengthening the ICMR and NCDC to make India self-reliant in vaccine and diagnostic development.
Pillar 4: Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM)
The “Software” or Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI).
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- ABHA ID (Ayushman Bharat Health Account):A unique 14-digit number that allows citizens to link all their health records (prescriptions, lab reports, discharge summaries) digitally.
- Interoperability:It allows a doctor in one city to view a patient’s medical history from another city (with patient consent), ensuring better diagnosis and reducing repetitive tests.
- e-Sanjeevani:Integration with tele-consultation services, allowing rural patients to consult top specialists via video call at their local Ayushman Arogya Mandir.
- Healthcare Professionals Registry (HPR):A verified database of all doctors and nurses to ensure citizens aren’t misled by unqualified practitioners.
“While Pillars 1 and 2 address the Demand and Access (Wellness and Insurance), Pillars 3 and 4 address the Supply and Efficiency (Infrastructure and Data). Together, they aim to transition India from ‘Out-of-pocket’ healthcare to ‘Universal’ healthcare.”
PROBLEMS AND CHALLENGES OF EACH PILLAR
Pillar 1: Ayushman Arogya Mandir
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- Infrastructure vs. Care:While 1.7 lakh+ centers exist, many function without the full 12-service package. They often remain “screening centers” rather than “treatment centers.”
- Absenteeism:There is a chronic shortage of Mid-Level Health Providers (MLHPs) and doctors in remote areas.
- Low Diagnostic Capacity:Many AAMs still lack the reagents or equipment to perform all mandated free diagnostics, forcing patients to go to private labs.
Pillar 2: PM-Jan Arogya Yojana
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- The Missing Middle:PM-JAY covers the bottom 40%, and corporate insurance covers the top 10%. Roughly 400–500 million people (the “Missing Middle”) remain uninsured and vulnerable to poverty.
- Low Reimbursement Rates:Private hospitals often claim the government’s fixed package rates are too low to cover actual costs, leading to “denial of service” or hidden charges.
- Regional Imbalance:60% of empanelled hospitals are in a few developed states, leaving beneficiaries in states like Bihar or UP with limited choices.
Pillar 3: PM-ABHIM (Infrastructure)
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- Absorption Capacity:Many states lack the administrative machinery to utilize the massive ₹64,000 Cr outlay effectively, leading to “unspent balances.”
- Maintenance:Building a critical care block is easy; maintaining high-end ventilators and oxygen plants with trained technicians is the current bottleneck.
- Urban-Rural Tilt:Infrastructure spending is still heavily skewed toward district headquarters, leaving block-level facilities under-equipped.
Pillar 4: ABDM (Digital Mission)
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- Digital Literacy:Both patients and healthcare workers (especially ASHAs) find the digital interfaces complex.
- Data Privacy:Despite the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, concerns remain about the security of centralized health records (ABHA).
- Low Private Adoption:Large private hospital chains have been slow to integrate their proprietary software with the government’s digital ecosystem, leading to “data silos.”
Way Forward
1. Fiscal Discipline:Gradually increase the health budget to the promised 5% of GDP to improve reimbursement rates.
2. Strategic Purchasing:Renegotiate package rates with private hospitals to ensure they don’t turn away PM-JAY patients.
3. Human Resource Reform:Introduce a Cadre of Public Health Management professionals to run hospitals, allowing doctors to focus solely on clinical care.
4. Health Literacy Campaigns:Move ABDM from a “tech-push” to a “demand-pull” by making patients realize the value of portable records.
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OOPI from 62% to 38% As of October 2024, 36 crore beneficiaries have been verified under the scheme, and it has helped reduce OOPI, which used to be 62% and now has gone down to 38% in April 2025 |
BEST PRACTICES
Governance & Regulatory Best Practices
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- NITI Aayog’s Health Index:A “Performance-Linked” governance tool that ranks states on health outcomes. This has forced states like Uttar Pradesh and Assam to show rapid incremental progress to secure central funding.
- National Quality Assurance Standards (NQAS):Many states now link hospital funding to NQAS certification. Hospitals that meet these high standards of safety and cleanliness receive financial “quality incentives.”
- The Rajasthan Model (Right to Health):Rajasthan became the first state to provide a legal guarantee for emergency treatment, ensuring that no patient is turned away from private or public hospitals during critical hours.
Digital Health & Tech-Innovation (DPI)
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- Scan and Share (ABDM):Implemented in major hospitals like AIIMS, this allows patients to scan a QR code to register instantly. It has reduced registration queue times from 2 hours to 2 minutes.
- e-Sanjeevani (Hub & Spoke Model):Used effectively in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, where “Hubs” (Medical Colleges with specialists) are connected to “Spokes” (Rural Arogya Mandirs) via video. This brings super-specialist care to the village level.
- AI for TB & Cancer:States like Maharashtra are using AI-powered X-ray screening to detect TB in seconds, allowing for immediate treatment initiation under the “TB Mukt Bharat” mission.
Human Resource & Community Practices
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- The Odisha Model (ASHA Support):Odisha provides comprehensive “mobility support” (bicycles) and “health safety kits” to its 45,000+ ASHAs, leading to some of the fastest declines in Maternal Mortality in India.
- Mid-Level Health Providers (MLHPs):States like Chhattisgarh have successfully integrated B.Sc. Nursing graduates as “Community Health Officers” (CHOs) at primary centers, effectively solving the shortage of MBBS doctors in Naxal-affected and tribal regions.
Financial & Pharmaceutical Practices
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- Jan Aushadhi (The Pharmacy Revolution):By 2026, the network has reached 12,000+ stores. The “Best Practice” here is the Direct-to-Patient delivery of generic drugs for chronic diseases (Diabetes/BP) at 80% lower costs.
- Free Diagnostics (The Telangana Model):The “T-Diagnostics” initiative provides 50+ medical tests free of charge at the doorstep of primary health centers, with reports delivered via SMS within 24 hours.
Global Best Practices for the Indian Context
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- Thailand’s UHC Model:Focused on “Health Promotion” rather than just surgery.
- Brazil’s Family Health Program:The inspiration for India’s “Arogya Mandirs,” focusing on door-to-door family tracking.
- UK’s NICE Framework:India’s NHA (National Health Authority) is adopting similar “Value-based Pricing” to decide which new medicines should be subsidized under insurance.
