Micro Health Insurance Working for India

Submitted by Rob Katz on November 9, 2006 - 12:01.
Published in: | |
November 08, 2006 - 11:00, Christian Science Monitor
Micro health insurance hedges risk for India's poorest

Nandakumar Rajeshirke was suspicious of health insurance when he first heard about the idea three years ago. He had trouble understanding why it made sense to gamble on an unforeseen illness or accident when there was no guarantee he would ever see any money in return.

But his insurance provider, a network of nongovernmental organizations called UpLift India Association, had already earned his trust by supplying him with reliable microcredit to fund his stone carving business in the city of Pune. Mr. Rajeshirke decided to buy coverage for his whole family at 50 rupees ($1.10) per person annually and renewed the plan for several years in a row.

In 2005, his gamble paid off. Rajeshirke's wife needed a hysterectomy, a procedure that would normally cost 20,000 rupees ($446), one-third of his yearly salary.

"Without insurance," he says, "I would have had to sell some things from my house or get a loan from someone at high rates." Instead of facing financial ruin, he paid 6,000 rupees ($134) total and had help navigating the long process through diagnosis, surgery, and medication.

Such plans, known as micro health insurance, are gathering momentum in regions of Asia and Africa that lack public health strategies. These nonprofit programs aim to provide quality healthcare at low premiums on a community-level scale. The idea is that, with creative planning, the poor can benefit from the same protections against risk as the rich.

India is a world leader in this emerging field, with 5 to 10 million people enrolled in micro health insurance nationwide. Fewer than 10 percent of India's 1.1 billion people have any sort of health insurance, much of which covers only government employees. Poor people usually work in informal jobs or are self-employed, so they are extremely unlikely to be included in employment-related plans.

Continue reading "Micro health insurance hedges risk for India's poorest"
Submitted by Neil on January 30, 2007 - 19:45.
Micro finance should be supported by the government, so it can take off with a jummpstart. Wonder why the govt. never comes forward for such causes even though they know that this will help immesely. The only reason is that the policy makers are influenced by the multinational insurance companies (who by the way pay obscene license fees to the govt. to do business in a country) and therefore don't want to see these type of success stories eating at their potential customers. Financial Services Applications - nwaysoft
Submitted by p giridhar on November 4, 2007 - 13:11.
first of all India is a developing country,health insurance should get motivated by ngo or non ngo,this is utmost criteria in India,young generation waiting to do some thing for the poor,lot of kox(tb)and all types of malignancies are devoleping in whom,where poverty is more,in India there is death cases happening in villages due to lack of proper food,this should get rectified first,than we can expecting micro insurence giridhar
Submitted by Rürup Rente on July 26, 2008 - 12:59.
As Abigail stated, it sure seems like it would be a very difficult task for a non profit organization to make progress on. However, if it works out it is certainly for a fantastic cause. Good luck to them!

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