BRICS Digital Health Declaration adopted
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India at BRICS Digital Health Summit
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Dr. Bharati Pravin
Pawar discusses challenges and opportunities during the
implementation of Digital Health at the BRICS Ministerial Conclave
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“NDHM will streamline digital health and through the issue of Unique
Health ID create a single source of truth for facilities and practitioners”
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“BRICS Digital Health Platform is the need of the hour. It will provide
a repository of evidence-based policy making”
Union Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare
Dr. Bharati Pravin Pawar represented India at the BRICS ministerial conclave through
video-conference on 3 September, 2021. The panel discussed challenges and opportunities
during the implementation of Digital Health.
She addressed the panel on India’s priorities towards
full adoption of digital health technologies at all levels and BRICS’s strategy
in building a cadre of competent health informatics professionals using a standardized
curriculum across BRICS countries. India’s expectations from the development of
a repository of evidence based digital technologies and innovations for health systems
(under BRICS) and India’s strategic approach to sustain the gains from use of digital
innovations during COVID-19 in a sustainable manner towards building health systems
resilience was also discussed.
At the outset, Dr. Pawar
acknowledged that Digital Health has become the priority in wake of COVID 19 Pandemic.
She said, “The two waves presented us with unique challenges for which an effective
and humane centralized response sensitive to regional needs was warranted. The Digital
health was aptly utilized to manage the pandemic and enabled us for a much more
scientific and data driven approach for strengthening our response.”
Elaborating on India’s National Digital Health
Blueprint as an overarching architectural framework for digital initiatives in India,
she said, “We are implementing the recommendations for streamlining the digital
health programmes through National Digital Health Mission
(NDHM). NDHM through the issue of Unique Health ID will create a single source of
truth for facilities and practitioners and lead to extension of various health services
through digital mode.”
Dr. Pawar informed the audience that India’s immediate field level
priorities for creating an ecosystem of Digital Health includes Hospital Management
Information System (HMIS) implementation in all district hospitals for real time
clinical management, affordable and accessible medical consultation to every citizen
through telemedicine and establishing a framework for health disaster management
integrating all stakeholders.
On the creation of a pool of human resource for
managing pandemic digitally, the Minister showcased how India leveraged iGoT (online training platform) to train more than 16 million
COVID warriors across the spectrum to manage COVID which includes doctors, paramedic,
nurses, community participants etc.
Dr Pawar highlighted that BRICS digital health
platform is the need of the hour to ensure health data availability across BRICS
countries in an interoperable manner to ensure continuum of care: “We need to work
closely and collaboratively to create a repository of evidence based digital health
best practices for global good. Such framework should enable data sharing and availability
and help in augment the global capabilities to coordinate, capture and share data
for protection from disease outbreaks like the present COVID-19 pandemic.”
Ability of the platform to leverage existing organizations
and their experience like Global Digital Health Partnership, World Health Organization,
G20 etc. and policy advocacy for wider as well as appropriate adoption of Digital
Technologies not limiting to BRICS Countries was envisioned as India’s key expectation
from this platform.
Speaking on the technologies adopted during COVID-19,
she said, “We initiated a robust mechanism through a national Covid portal which integrated surveillance, testing, logistic
management, data driven analytics etc. We popularized Arogya
Setu and ITIHAS application – Digital Surveillance Application
to source data from citizens and to predict the upcoming hotpots in the community.
Arogya Setu became one of the
most downloaded application with more than 201 million downloads. Similarly, to
take health services to the doorstep of citizen, we are augmenting the National
telemedicine platform (eSanjeevani) of India and establishing
telemedicine HUBs with dedicated doctors in all Districts. The HUBs will serve all
facilities in their region, for both Covid & non Covid health care support.”
She also highlighted how some of these platforms
will have a lasting impact on Public Health: “India is leveraging the Disease Surveillance
Programme through an Integrated Health Information Platform
which source real time data from facilities on 33 Epidemic Prone Diseases for community
surveillance. India is undertaking the World’s largest vaccine drive and the whole
effort is being managed through digital tool, Co-WIN (Winning over COVID). Co-WIN has been declared as a global good by Government
of India for adoption by any country for managing their vaccination drive, not only
limiting to COVID but for conventional immunization also.”
In presence of honorable Health Ministers of BRICS
nations, BRICS Digital Health Declaration was adopted.
India being the host of the BRICS Digital Health
Summit, the conclave was presided by Union Health Secretary Rajesh Bhushan who brought focus to the wide adoption of digital health
in the COVID-19 Pandemic on the spectrum that includes population surveillance,
active case finding, communication with common citizens
in crisis. The embarking of nations on digital technology in embracing primary universal
health coverage was highlighted. Mr. Bhushan thanked all
the participating countries for sharing their valuable achievements and suggestions
regarding Digital Health at the meeting.