India
has improved its ranking on a global healthcare access and quality
(HAQ) index from 153 in 1990 to 145 in 2016, yet ranks lower than
neighbouring Bangladesh and even sub-Saharan Sudan and Equatorial
Guinea.
In 2016, India scored 41.2
points on the healthcare access and quality (HAQ) index created by
the Global Burden of Disease study published in the medical journal
The Lancet on May 23, 2018. This 16.5-point improvement in 26 years
leaves India’s score well below the global average of 54.4.
Despite improvements in
healthcare access and quality, India lags way behind its BRICS peers
Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa on the HAQ index, but matches
China in disparity in healthcare access and quality between states.
Within India, best
performers Goa and Kerala scored more than 60 points on the HAQ
index in 2016, whereas worst performers
Assam and Uttar Pradesh scored below 40. This gap between the highest
and lowest scores increased from a 23.4 point difference in 1990 to a
30.8 point difference in 2016. (China fared the worst with a
43.5-point difference, ranging from 91.5 in Beijing to 48.0 in
Tibet.)
The index is based on 32
causes of death considered preventable with effective medical care.
It assigns a 0-100 score
to each of the 195 countries and territories assessed. For the first
time, this year’s study analysed healthcare access and quality
between regions within seven countries: Brazil, China, England,
India, Japan, Mexico and the USA.
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