Dharavi hosp resumes haemodialysis, but with a new PPP model
Mumbai, Aug. 24 -- Eight months after its hemodialysis services shut down, the Loknete Eknathrao Gaikwad Urban Health Centre at Dharavi has restarted the services, but now under a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model. Hemodialysis is a complex procedure which involves filtering waste products and excess fluids from the blood in cases of kidney failures.
The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) and the Lokmanya Tilak Municipal General (LTMG) Hospital in Sion which manages the centre have let a private owner take over their dialysis unit following a tender process that was extended till August 19.
Under the new model, patients without coverage under the Mahatma Jyotiba Phule Jan Arogya Yojana (MJPJAY) scheme, and those not holding yellow or orange ration cards will be charged Rs.1000 per dialysis session. Dean of LTMG Hospital, Dr Mohan Joshi said, "Every citizen who is under MJPJAY and ration card holders will be able to access the centre for dialysis for free, the rest will have to pay the designated amount."
As per the tender, for the next decade, doctors for the dialysis centre will be provided by the Sion hospital, while the private player will handle the centre's administrative and operational needs. The BMC says that this move will allow the hospital to resume offering the service, which had stopped due to administrative reasons. However, activists and patient groups have slammed the involvement of private players as privatisation of essential health care. They argue that the cost burden will fall heavily on vulnerable patients in Dharavi who depend on municipal hospitals for affordable treatment.
"For many patients, this is a lifelong procedure that often requires weekly or even more frequent sessions. At around Rs.1,000 per session, the costs can become crippling for those who depend on civic hospitals," said Dr. Abhay Shukla, national co-convenor of Jan Swasthya Abhiyan, a coalition of NGOs and healthcare professionals.
According to Shukla, a large number of the city's residents, including seasonal migrants, do not have ration cards. For them, this policy shift could mean losing affordable access to lifesaving care. "Instead of outsourcing, BMC should strengthen its own healthcare capacity and provide such services in-house to ensure costs don't escalate for the public," he said.
Shukla added that as lifestyle diseases such as diabetes rise, more of the urban population is developing kidney failures, making hemodialysis an essential service. "It is critical that such treatment remains affordable and widely accessible to those who need it the most," Shukla said.
While civic officials have stated that the PPP model will reduce manpower costs and improve efficiency, activists argued that the move amounts to privatising public assets built with taxpayer money. "There have been studies done on the fact that these models reduce accountability and will lead to a significant impact of lessening accessibility of healthcare to the public," said Shukla....
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