Health insurance coverage has grown significantly in India. However, patients continue to pay most hospitalisation bills themselves. Rural patients spent about 95% of costs from their own pockets.
New Delhi, The findings from the National Statistical Office 80th Round Household Consumption: Health survey highlighted a significant increase in healthcare access across the country, supported by ...
NSO survey reveals improved health-seeking behavior in India, with rising government insurance coverage and low out-of-pocket medical expenses.
An NSO survey on household consumption shows marked improvement in healthcare access, affordability, and utilization across India, driven by expanded public health infrastructure, higher insurance ...
The findings from the National Statistical Office (NSO) 80th Round Household Consumption: Health survey highlight significant increase in healthcare access across the country, supported by ...
SBI General Insurance, one of India's leading general insurance companies, has announced a new film featuring Pankaj Tripathi in continuation of its campaign 'Chuniye Bharosa, Apno Sa'. The film ...
The National Statistical Survey Office (NSO) survey on household social consumption on health has highlighted transformative ...
India's healthcare access and public facility use have increased significantly by 2025 Median out-of-pocket hospitalisation costs dropped to Rs 1,100 in public facilities Government insurance coverage ...
The cost of private healthcare has increased at a much greater pace than of public health care, says the data released by National Statistical Office.
The 80th NSO survey highlights progress in India's healthcare with improved access and affordability. It shows low average expenditure, zero out-of-pocket costs for public outpatient care, and ...
India’s 80th round National Statistical Office health survey shows unprecedented gains in access, affordability, and insurance coverage, driven by expanded public health infrastructure and targeted ...
India’s latest official health survey shows a sharp increase in illness without a corresponding rise in hospitalisation as treatment costs see steep ...