A major health problem,
appearing suddenly out of the blue, can squeeze the family’s resources to the
last drop and land you in a debt trap, as I learnt from Rahul’s case recently.
Twenty- year old healthy
Rahul, who hails from a village near Agra, was perfectly well till the day
before, playing cricket with his friends. That morning a gnawing pain started
in the upper abdomen that increased in severity to a deep boring one and
started radiating to his back. He threw up a few times, started sweating and
became breathless. His father, Om Prakash, came back from the private sugar
mill where he worked as a supervisor, and carried him in a borrowed 3 wheeler
to the nearest local doctor.
Sensing something serious,
the doctor referred him to a nearby hospital. Having diagnosed Acute
Pancreatitis, a condition that could turn potentially fatal, they referred him
to a specialized centre. His condition continued to worsen, and Om Prakash
could not bear to his only son of 6 children, fight for breath. Unable to risk
his son’s life he took a loan of Rs 1 lac from his colleagues, and brought
him to a major corporate hospital in
Gurgaon that has the reputation of providing the best services.
Rahulcondition remained
critical and had to be admitted in the Intensive Care Unit. After many
uncertain moments and galloping expenses, his condition stabilized by the 3rd
week doctors thought him fit for discharge.
Om Prakash had got back his
son but had taken loans of Rs 15 lacs to meet his son’s hospital expenses. He
had mortgaged his small house as well as the future of his 5 daughters.
The last 3 weeks had been
so tumultuous that he had not had time to think about what the consequences
could be. With a monthly salary of Rs
4500/- how would he ever pay back the loan? What would happen to his daughters’
education. And marriage? What if Rahul had another attack? Or if something
happened to him, the only earner?
This is the drama that we see being played out
to numerous families in India. Good medical care is what they all need, and
emotions often dictate that one should go for the best for someone you love.
But when problems come up suddenly, we find ourselves unprepared to face the
financial consequences.
With government hospitals
either ill equipped or overloaded to cope with the number of patients, and with
the gap widening drastically between our financial means and the sky-rocketing
costs of good private medical care, middle class Indians are having a tough
time deciding what to do.
Medical insurance is
perhaps the answer but has still not won the confidence of most Indians as only
15% have it. And getting them to pay up
what they had promised when selling the policy can be harrowing.
The common countryman can
only pray that fate does not lead him into the medical debt trap that Om
Prakash has fallen into.
As published in HT City ( Hindustan Times) dated 23rd September, 2012.
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