The Centre is reportedly going to shelve a plan to procure generic drugs for free supply to patients throughout the country.
This is a serious error.
Reportedly, states will instead be asked to do so; but, if a perceived inability to procure, stock and distribute these drugs is the reason for backtracking on the plan, how precisely will states be free of these constraints?
A few states, true, are already running their own schemes for providing free drugs from the government health centres.
But many among the others may not be capable of emulating them despite the Centre allowing them to access national health mission funds for this purpose.
In any case, decentralisation of generic drug sourcing -- done everywhere at the highest possible level -- would create more glitches than it is expected to do away with.
It would further widen the scope for leakages and other malpractices which are already rampant in the understaffed, under-resourced and ailing public health system.
Re-routing of the same medicines into the system would not be ruled out.
To compound the woes of those patients who have to rely on government health centres, the government has done little to enforce its order binding the doctors to prescribe generic rather than branded drugs.
That cosy relationships exist between some doctors and drug suppliers, fostering the prescription of brand-name drugs when cheaper generic alternatives are available, is well-known.
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