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Majhi inaugurates medical college in Phulbani
Majhi inaugurates medical college in Phulbani

Hans India

time2 days ago

  • Health
  • Hans India

Majhi inaugurates medical college in Phulbani

Bhubaneswar: Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi on Saturday inaugurated a 100-seat government medical college and a 650-bed hospital at Phulbani, the district headquarters of Kandhamal. The Chief Minister, during his one-day visit to Kandhamal, also inaugurated and laid the foundation stone of 10 development projects worth about Rs 750 crore. This included the inauguration of five projects worth Rs 655 crore andthe foundation stone laying of five other projects worth over Rs 94 crore. Health and Family Welfare Minister Mukesh Mahaling, Kandhamal MP Sukant Kumar Panigrahi and Phulbani MLA Umcharan Mallick accompanied him. Speaking on the occasion, Majhi said the inauguration of the medical college in Kandhamal district has fulfilled a long-awaited demand of the local people. 'This medical college in Kandhamal will also provide quality health service to the people of nearby districts like Nayagarh, Boudh and Kalahandi. This 100-seat medical college will help meet the doctor shortage in the State. This will also act as a powerful engine for local employment, research and economic development,' the Chief Minister said. Majhi said the people of this region had to travel to Berhampur or Cuttack to avail better health care. Now, they will get a similar healthcare facility at their place. After graduating from this 100-seat college, the doctors are expected to work in this tribal-dominated district. 'Service to humanity is service to God,' the Chief Minister said and advised the medical students to make this college a leading institution in the field of healthcare. The Chief Minister also said his government has introduced the 'Ayushman Bharat-Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana' in Odisha, an opportunity denied to the people during the previous government. Over 3.5 crore people of the State will be able to get free healthcare in 29,000 private medical facilities in the country. This apart, the State government's 'Gopabandhu Jan Arogya Yojana' is being implemented as a single health service scheme. More than 80 per cent of people of the State will get benefits from these health service schemes, Majhi said, adding that the State has made a budgetary provision of Rs 23,635 crore for healthcare alone, which is 8.2 per cent of the total budget. This is the highest in the history of the State, he said. After this, the Chief Minister inaugurated and laid the foundation stone of 10 different development projects worth about Rs 750 crore in Phulbani for the development of the district. These include rural drinking water projects, mega piped water supply projects, school infrastructure improvement, tourism centres, health centres, road construction projects, Mission Shakti Bazaar, Multipurpose Community Centres and other government infrastructure. Referring to the inauguration and foundation stone laying of other projects, Majhi said his government has been working continuously to provide basic amenities like good education, health, tourism, infrastructure, transportation to the people of the district, having a tribal population of 54 per cent. Majhi said many industrial projects will be set up in Kandhamal district in the coming days. This will double the industrial development of the district and bring ample opportunities for employment and employment of the people of the district. The Chief Minister also said the State government is paying special attention to the development of tourism in Daringbadi, the paradise of natural beauty in Odisha. 'A project worth Rs 18 crore has been approved and tenders have been invited for the development of tourism in Daringbadi and Rs 4.5 crore has been approved for the development of Putudi waterfall,' Majhi said. Apart from this, other tourist destinations in Kandhamal will also be developed, he said.

Private hospitals demand higher package rates under AB PM-JAY, GJAY
Private hospitals demand higher package rates under AB PM-JAY, GJAY

New Indian Express

time22-04-2025

  • Health
  • New Indian Express

Private hospitals demand higher package rates under AB PM-JAY, GJAY

BHUBANESWAR : The All Odisha Private Medical Establishment Forum (AOPMEF) has expressed serious concerns over the technical glitches, impractical pricing structures and operational hurdles that threaten the viability of private healthcare services after implementation of Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY and Gopabandhu Jan Arogya Yojana (GJAY) scheme in the state. In a detailed representation to Health minister Mukesh Mahaling, the AOPMEF flagged issues including package pricing, operational challenges and software or IT-related difficulties, seeking his intervention to resolve them. The forum has demanded a minimum of 30 pc increase in package rates over the previous scheme BSKY, stating that the current pricing fails to account for inflation and is financially unsustainable. The private establishments pointed out that high-cost procedures like cardiotocography (CTG) for lower segment cesarean section (LSCS) have been capped under low-value package (Rs 15,000), making it unfeasible which will compromise service quality. AOPMEF secretary Dr Indramani Jena urged for a revision in implant pricing and a return to editable options. Currently, implant packages like pacemakers are capped at Rs 75,000, and spine implants at Rs 10,000, which he claimed are unsustainable. 'Such rigid pricing structures would directly impact the quality of treatment, especially in critical surgeries. Advanced diagnostics like CT, MRI, PFT, NCV, EMG and FeNO, which are missing, must be included,' he said. Operationally, the hospitals reported disruptive changes in workflow due to round-the-clock Aadhaar-based OTP authentication by medical superintendents, which is completely impractical. The forum suggested delegating certain responsibilities to medical coordinators (Medcos) to improve efficiency. The private hospitals sought relaxation of new discharge requirements including the mandatory submission of medical slips and photographs with patients - practices they said are logistically difficult and administratively taxing. 'Software-related issues further compound the challenges. Lack of realtime card verification, balance-check features, and extremely slow software during peak hours compound the problems. Documents often disappear within seconds post-upload, causing repeated work and potential errors,' said forum president Dr Subrat Jena. Another major concern remains the centralised management of the scheme. AOPMEF argued that since healthcare is a state subject, local officials should be empowered to resolve operational and payment-related issues instead of relying solely on directives from central authorities.

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