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DAVID GREENE, HOST:
We have brought you more than a few stories about the Affordable1 Care Act, or Obamacare. But Modicare, nicknamed for India's prime minister, Narendra Modi, is actually the biggest government health plan in the world. Modi wants to give poor Indians health insurance they can use to buy private care. NPR's Lauren Frayer reports.
MIHIR DALAL: This is the largest physical medicine and rehab unit in the private space in India.
LAUREN FRAYER, BYLINE2: Dr. Mihir Dalal shows me around Mumbai's Kokilaben Ambani Hospital. It's one of the top hospitals in Asia. There's a robotics rehab unit and a state-of-the-art cancer center. They also do gender3 reassignment surgery here. There are marble hallways, free Wi-Fi.
DALAL: So we are in the lobby. We have a large waiting area.
FRAYER: Looks like a hotel lobby.
DALAL: Chandeliers, large French windows. We have the Starbucks cafe.
FRAYER: Private hospitals like this one cater4 to paying customers. Medical tourists come from as far as the U.S. to get hip5 replacements6 and other surgery much cheaper than back home. But most locals cannot afford this. Ninety percent of Indians go to public hospitals. Care in those is free but nowhere near as sophisticated.
In a one-room house in a Mumbai slum, Shaheen Khan sits cross-legged on the cement floor in pain. She's got gallstones.
SHAHEEN KHAN: (Speaking Hindi).
FRAYER: She explains how her family rushed her to the city's Sion Hospital, a government facility, back in June. Doctors told her they would operate, but after eight days, they discharged her. There weren't enough beds. Patients were sharing mattresses7 on the floor.
KHAN: (Through interpreter) They said we don't have space in our hospital. There are so many patients, and there's a risk of infection spreading. So it's better for you to go home, they told me.
FRAYER: They said they'd call when a bed opens up. It's been six weeks. Her phone hasn't rung. Shaheen is a widow unable to work living off her brother. Just like in the U.S., illness often bankrupts whole families in India. People like Shaheen are the target of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's new health plan, offering the poorest half of India - more than 500 million people - health insurance to apply toward private care.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
PRIME MINISTER NARENDRA MODI: (Speaking Hindi).
FRAYER: "Health care should be accessible and affordable," the prime minister said in a radio address this spring. Each family would get more than $7,200 in annual coverage8, he said, which might not buy a lot of health care in the U.S. but goes a long way in India. The program is expected to roll out by the end of this year. Modi is running for re-election next year.
RAVI RAMAMURTI: This is a very nice appealing from a political perspective, as you can imagine.
FRAYER: Ravi Ramamurti is a professor of international business who's studied India's health system and its government hospitals.
RAMAMURTI: They are poorly staffed. Equipment there often doesn't work. They have employees who sometimes don't show up. Even the poor, if they can at all find the means, often will look for a private solution.
FRAYER: Modicare could help them, and it's easier to shepherd patients into less crowded, private hospitals then revamp all the public ones.
(CROSSTALK)
FRAYER: A hundred miles outside of Mumbai, a big, rural government hospital is completely full and a bit chaotic9 - a world away from the private hospital's marble lobby. There's a bloody10 gurney in the hall here. But every patient we approached was satisfied with their care.
SURESH JAGDALE: Health scheme - it's total free.
FRAYER: Because it's totally free says the director of the Nashik District hospital, Dr. Suresh Jagdale. He feels proud. India is a developing country that has managed to provide free health care, however rudimentary. Now Modicare seeks to improve it. India spends only about 4 percent of its GDP on health care. The U.S., by contrast, spends nearly 17 percent. Ravi Ramamurti, the health care expert, says the Indian government can afford Modicare, at least for now.
RAMAMURTI: One or two billion dollars is not more than what the Indian government can afford. But these programs have a way of exploding over time. Then it can actually get to be a bigger constraint11. These are programs you can never pull back.
FRAYER: For Modi, this is good politics. For India, this may be a giant step toward better health care for 1.3 billion people. Lauren Frayer, NPR News, Mumbai.
1 affordable | |
adj.支付得起的,不太昂贵的 | |
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2 byline | |
n.署名;v.署名 | |
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3 gender | |
n.(生理上的)性,(名词、代词等的)性 | |
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4 cater | |
vi.(for/to)满足,迎合;(for)提供饮食及服务 | |
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5 hip | |
n.臀部,髋;屋脊 | |
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6 replacements | |
n.代替( replacement的名词复数 );替换的人[物];替代品;归还 | |
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7 mattresses | |
褥垫,床垫( mattress的名词复数 ) | |
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8 coverage | |
n.报导,保险范围,保险额,范围,覆盖 | |
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9 chaotic | |
adj.混沌的,一片混乱的,一团糟的 | |
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10 bloody | |
adj.非常的的;流血的;残忍的;adv.很;vt.血染 | |
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11 constraint | |
n.(on)约束,限制;限制(或约束)性的事物 | |
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