Home Health Modi govt’s Jan Arogya scheme looks at group health insurance plans to cover the uninsured

Modi govt’s Jan Arogya scheme looks at group health insurance plans to cover the uninsured

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Modi govt’s Jan Arogya scheme looks at group health insurance plans to cover the uninsured

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National health Insurance Scheme
National health Insurance Scheme / Illustration by Siddhant Gupta

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New Delhi: In a bid to increase health insurance coverage in India, the National Health Authority (NHA) is planning to launch three-year pilot projects with insurance companies under which they will be able to use the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) platform for group insurance plans at PMJAY rates and packages.  

Every individual in every such group, however, will have to be without any existing health insurance. PMJAY is the secondary and tertiary care arm of Ayushman Bharat.

The initial back-of-the-envelope calculations are that for a cover of Rs 5 lakh per annum, each member of the group may need to pay a premium of Rs 300-600. There will be no subsidisation by the government, but just benefits associated with the economy of scale, officials explained. 

The notice issued by the NHA inviting expressions of interest said: “It is thus proposed to carry out insurance pilots drawing upon AB PM-JAY framework, retaining the core features of AB PM-JAY benefits, processes, IT infrastructure, hospital network etc for similar economies and efficiencies for all stakeholders, resulting in affordable premium levels, product acceptance and uptake in large numbers by the end customer/communities. The insurance company shall offer coverage as above to the uncovered population on a self-pay basis, having liberty to innovate, to attract and to service as suitable for the profile of customers in this segment, their needs and aspiration etc.”


Also read: What is digital health ID? All about the 14-digit number and privacy concerns around it


‘Only for the uninsured’

The group insurance plan can pick any group but none of the members should have insurance.  

“We have no problems provided it is a defined group — it could be the employees of one company, it could be sacked employees of another. It could be domestic workers in a particular locality who have been aggregated,” said an NHA official, explaining the principle behind the scheme. “Just that no person in the group should have an existing health insurance. We will do some checks to prevent something like that from happening.” 

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