Health Data in India: From Surveys to Policy Action

Why in News: Health Data in Focus
- Three major health surveys were recently released — NFHS-6, NSO 80th Round Household Consumption on Health and National Health Accounts Estimates 2022-23.
- NFHS-6 data were collected during 2023-24 but entered public debate only in mid-2026 — a critical two-year lag.
- Government communication highlighted only achievements, while weak areas received inadequate policy attention.
Key Findings: Rising NCDs and Health Expenditure
- Obesity, diabetes and hypertension have spread from urban affluent groups to all social and economic groups.
- NCDs are rising among children indicating a serious public health emergency requiring urgent preventive action.
- Out-of-pocket expenditure on health remains high despite government claims of a declining percentage share.
- Anaemia has not improved meaningfully despite multiple national programmes targeting this condition.
- The two surveys on health expenses barely received any public or policy attention despite critical findings.
Challenge 1: Data-to-Action Gap
- Health surveys are treated as national reminders of familiar problems rather than instruments of course correction.
- Government highlights achievements, newspapers amplify numbers, academics await raw data and industry identifies market opportunities instead.
- Rising NCDs are commercially exploited for weight-loss products, diagnostics, monitoring devices and private clinic expansion.
- A health survey is not meant to describe problems — it must trigger accountability and corrective action.
Challenge 2: Time Lag, Delayed Raw Data and Fragmented Systems
- The two-year lag between data collection and public release allows governments to dismiss findings as outdated conveniently.
- Raw data are released late, delaying independent academic analysis by three to five years after collection.
- By the time peer-reviewed studies appear, policymakers can dismiss findings as no longer relevant.
- Fragmented data sources — NFHS, HMIS and IHIP — produce fragmented policies without meaningful integration.
Way Forward: Reforms for Data-Driven Health Governance
- Action Notes: Every major national health survey must be followed within 30-45 days by a national and State-level action note prepared jointly by government and independent institutions.
- Accountability Linkage: Each survey finding must be linked to a specific programme and a clearly accountable authority without exception.
- State-Level Reviews: Health Secretaries, Finance Departments, district officials, public health experts and civil society must hold working review sessions — not ceremonial events.
- Integrated Data Systems: IHIP, HMIS and survey data must be combined to generate analytical information and prevent fragmented policymaking.
- Early Raw Data Release: Primary data and source files must be made available early as a public good for independent researchers and institutions.
- Budgetary Consequence: Survey findings must directly influence budgetary allocations — rising NCDs must expand primary care budgets and essential drug availability.
Conclusion: As economist Aaron Levenstein noted, “statistics are like bikinis — what they conceal is vital.” Health data must function like an x-ray — useful only when interpreted honestly and followed by policy action. India needs not just more data, but more accountability.
Source: The Hindu

