Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note

Punjab made little progress on key health indicators during the 1990s the state was not able to significantly reduce infant and under-five mortality rates. In 1998-99 institutional births accounted for only 37 percent of the total, while 37.4 perce...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Policy Note
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/424081468042841828/Punjab-Health-sector-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36775
id okr-10986-36775
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-367752021-12-23T05:10:36Z Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note World Bank HEALTH SECTOR EXISTING EVIDENCE HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH FINANCING HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE PUBLIC SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR INNOVATIONS RECOMMENDATIONS BURDEN OF DISEASE PUBLIC SPENDING ADDITIONAL SOURCES HEALTH SYSTEM INEQUALITIES QUALITY OF CARE HOSPITAL AUTONOMY MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING HEALTH INDICATORS Punjab made little progress on key health indicators during the 1990s the state was not able to significantly reduce infant and under-five mortality rates. In 1998-99 institutional births accounted for only 37 percent of the total, while 37.4 percent of all deliveries were not attended by any health personnel, and 25 percent of children were malnourished. Finally, the tragedy of female feticide and infanticide continue to haunt the state, which has by far the lowest sex ratio in the country and there are strong indications that the situation is deteriorating rapidly. In terms of health system performance, Punjab compares well with the Indian average, but lags behind other states at comparable levels of socio-economic development. Key indicators point to a mixed picture with high contraceptive prevalence at 67 percent but a very low proportion of institutional deliveries, which at 38 percent is less than half that of Tamil Nadu or Kerala. Punjab shows the same acute inequalities as the rest of the country, in terms of distribution of service utilization by socio-economic groups. The health sector largely fails to reach the poor, mostly concentrated among rural populations and schedule castes. In conclusion, while coverage may still be an issue particularly in the peripheral rural areas, all the evidence shows that the key issue to address in Punjab is poor quality of services. In the public sector, the deterioration of services is extremely severe, particularly in primary care. 2021-12-22T17:39:35Z 2021-12-22T17:39:35Z 2005-05 Policy Note http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/424081468042841828/Punjab-Health-sector-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36775 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note South Asia India
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic HEALTH SECTOR
EXISTING EVIDENCE
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR
INNOVATIONS
RECOMMENDATIONS
BURDEN OF DISEASE
PUBLIC SPENDING ADDITIONAL SOURCES
HEALTH SYSTEM INEQUALITIES
QUALITY OF CARE
HOSPITAL AUTONOMY
MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING
HEALTH INDICATORS
spellingShingle HEALTH SECTOR
EXISTING EVIDENCE
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR
INNOVATIONS
RECOMMENDATIONS
BURDEN OF DISEASE
PUBLIC SPENDING ADDITIONAL SOURCES
HEALTH SYSTEM INEQUALITIES
QUALITY OF CARE
HOSPITAL AUTONOMY
MANAGEMENT AND TRAINING
HEALTH INDICATORS
World Bank
Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note
geographic_facet South Asia
India
description Punjab made little progress on key health indicators during the 1990s the state was not able to significantly reduce infant and under-five mortality rates. In 1998-99 institutional births accounted for only 37 percent of the total, while 37.4 percent of all deliveries were not attended by any health personnel, and 25 percent of children were malnourished. Finally, the tragedy of female feticide and infanticide continue to haunt the state, which has by far the lowest sex ratio in the country and there are strong indications that the situation is deteriorating rapidly. In terms of health system performance, Punjab compares well with the Indian average, but lags behind other states at comparable levels of socio-economic development. Key indicators point to a mixed picture with high contraceptive prevalence at 67 percent but a very low proportion of institutional deliveries, which at 38 percent is less than half that of Tamil Nadu or Kerala. Punjab shows the same acute inequalities as the rest of the country, in terms of distribution of service utilization by socio-economic groups. The health sector largely fails to reach the poor, mostly concentrated among rural populations and schedule castes. In conclusion, while coverage may still be an issue particularly in the peripheral rural areas, all the evidence shows that the key issue to address in Punjab is poor quality of services. In the public sector, the deterioration of services is extremely severe, particularly in primary care.
format Policy Note
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note
title_short Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note
title_full Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note
title_fullStr Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note
title_full_unstemmed Punjab Health Sector Assessment : A Policy Note
title_sort punjab health sector assessment : a policy note
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/424081468042841828/Punjab-Health-sector-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36775
_version_ 1764484725891661824