
Why does India not have a national emergency helpline?
Prof Rama Baru outlines the emergency health landscape in India, explains how the private-public partnership model for ambulance services works in India and underscores the urgent need for a national framework to regulate the sector.
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Show Notes
Blinkit, a quick commerce company was recently in the news after it announced the launch of its 10-minute ambulance service, to be rolled out, beginning in Gurugaon and with plans to expand to other cities over two years. The launch, while praised in some quarters and criticised in others has thrown into focus a larger question: why does India not have a national emergency service helpline and an adequate number of ambulances to cater to its population? Considering that we are a country with one of the highest road traffic accidents in the world and a growing burden of non-communicable diseases such as heart disease, this critical aspect of medical care seems to be neglected: emergency services at present are provided by private hospitals, at a cost, by emerging services such as Blinkit, also at a cost, and when provided by the government are uneven and fragmented across the country.
What are the issues around emergency services in India? Do we have adequate numbers of vehicles for our population and an equal number of trained paramedics and driver? Do we need a framework to regulate this sector?
Guest: Rama Baru, retired professor of social medicine and community health, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
Host: Zubeda Hamid
Edited by Jude Francis Weston
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