After sharp cut in angioplasty operation costs under Central
Government Health Scheme (CHGS), the government government has again hit by
capping price on stents from Rs 65,000 to Rs25,000 each for its employees.
Stents are tiny medical devices used to clear blockages in
arteries, thereby preventing heart attacks via angioplasty operation. A medical
stent costs almost Rs 1 lakh. Recently, the government slashed the package for
an entire angioplasty operation to Rs 50,000 from Rs 1.25 lakh, making it
almost impossible for the hospitals under CGHS to do the procedure with the
amount. Now the government will only provide Rs 25,000 for drug-eluting stents
whether they are local or international make. The entitlement for bare metal
stents will be Rs 10,000 each, which was 50,000 in 1997 and reduced to 20,000
in 2011. Moreover, government employees and their relatives cannot seek more
than two drug-eluting stents. The revised cap on stents means an
angioplasty plus stents cannot overshoot Rs 1 lakh for serving and retired
government servants.
For the CGHS hospitals, where they were eligible for Rs
1,92,500 for an angioplasty procedure, the new limit will be Rs. 75,000.
The government claims that it will not only save
tax-payers’ money but will also make the angioplasty more affordable for people
who are not insured. Apart from bringing down the cost of the procedure, this
move will also give the Indian stent manufacturers a level playing field with the
multinational equipment manufacturers.
So ultimately the government is forcing the
employees to go for most-lowly priced stents, that are locally made
and don't go through the rigorous certification process that foreign ones do.
And definitly this will be a push for private health insurance companies
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