PERIYAR IAS CURRENT AFFAIRS 15-JUNE-2018
Paper 2:
Topic:
Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and
issues arising out of their design and implementation.
Ayushman Bharat health scheme
Context: Around 20 states have so far signed
memoranda of understanding to implement Ayushman Bharat National Health
Protection Mission which aims to provide health protection to around 10 crore
poor families in the country.
Highlights of the scheme:
Coverage: The scheme has the benefit cover of Rs.
5 lakh per family per year. To ensure that nobody is left out (especially
women, children and elderly) there will be no cap on family size and age in the
scheme. The benefit cover will also include pre and post-hospitalisation
expenses.
Target: The target beneficiaries of the
proposed scheme will be more than 10 crore families belonging to poor and
vulnerable population based on SECC database. Benefits of the scheme are
portable across the country and a beneficiary covered under the scheme will be
allowed to take cashless benefits from any public/private empanelled hospitals
across the country.
Role of state governments: State Governments will be allowed to
expand AB-NHPM both horizontally and vertically. States will be free to choose
the modalities for implementation. They can implement through insurance company
or directly through Trust/ Society or a mixed model.
Council: For giving policy directions and
fostering coordination between Centre and States, it is proposed to set up
Ayushman Bharat National Health Protection Mission Council (AB-NHPMC) at apex
level Chaired by Union Health and Family Welfare Minister.
Who is eligible?
§ It will be an entitlement based scheme with
entitlement decided on the basis of deprivation criteria in the SECC database.
§ The different categories in rural area
include families having only one room with kucha walls and kucharoof; families
having no adult member between age 16 to 59; female headed households with no
adult male member between age 16 to 59; disabled member and no able bodied
adult member in the family; SC/ST households; and landless households deriving
major part of their income from manual casual labour.
§ Also, automatically included families in
rural areas having any one of the following: households without shelter,
destitute, living on alms, manual scavenger families, primitive tribal groups,
legally released bonded labour. For urban areas, 11 defined occupational
categories are entitled under the scheme.
Implementation Strategy:
At the national level to manage, an Ayushman
Bharat National Health Protection Mission Agency (AB-NHPMA) would be put in
place. States/ UTs would be advised to implement the scheme by a dedicated
entity called State Health Agency (SHA). They can either use an existing Trust/
Society/ Not for Profit Company/ State Nodal Agency (SNA) or set up a new
entity to implement the scheme. States/ UTs can decide to implement the scheme
through an insurance company or directly through the Trust/ Society or use an
integrated model.
Benefits of the scheme:
This will lead to increased access to quality
health and medication. In addition, the unmet needs of the population which
remained hidden due to lack of financial resources will be catered to. This
will lead to timely treatments, improvements in health outcomes, patient
satisfaction, improvement in productivity and efficiency, job creation thus
leading to improvement in quality of life.
Way ahead:
The scheme, if implemented properly could be
a game changer by enhancing access to health care including early detection and
treatment services by a large section of society who otherwise could not afford
them. The identification of beneficiaries can be done by linking with Aadhar
and similarly following up for services received and health outcomes achieved,
thereby helping to monitor and evaluate the impact of the programme.
Ultimately, the scheme could help country
move towards universal health coverage and equitable access to healthcare which
is one of the UN Sustainable Development Goals or SDGs.
What’s important?
§ For Prelims: Ayushman Bharat- details of the
scheme.
§ For Mains: Need for universal health
coverage.
Sources: pib.
Topic: Issues
relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to
Health, Education, Human Resources.
India among over 90 nations without paid
paternity leave
Context: According to a new UNICEF analysis,
India is among almost 90 countries in the world without national policies in
place that ensure new fathers get adequate paid time off with their newborn
babies.
Highlights of the report:
§ Almost two-thirds of the world’s children
under one-year-old, nearly 90 million, live in countries where their fathers
are not entitled by law to a single day of paid paternity leave.
§ India and Nigeria, which have high infant
populations, are among the 92 countries do not have national policies in place
that ensure new fathers get adequate paid time off with their newborn babies.
§ In eight countries across the world,
including the United States which is home to nearly four million infants, there
was no paid maternity or paternity leave policy.
§ Other countries with high infant populations,
including Brazil and Congo, all have national paid paternity leave policies,
albeit offering relatively short-term entitlements.
Need for paternity leave:
§ Evidence suggests that when fathers bond with
their babies from the beginning of life, they are more likely to play a more
active role in the child’s development. Research also suggests that when
children positively interact with their fathers, they have better psychological
health, self-esteem and life-satisfaction in the long-term.
§ Also, positive and meaningful interaction
with mothers and fathers from the very beginning helps shape children’s brain
growth and development for life, making them healthier and happier, and
increasing their ability to learn.
Way ahead:
Around the world, momentum for
family-friendly policies is growing. For example, India has proposed a
Paternity Benefit Bill for consideration in the next session of Parliament
which would allow fathers up to three months of paid paternity leave.
UNICEF has urged governments to implement
national family-friendly policies that support early childhood development,
including paid paternity leave, to help provide parents with the time,
resources and information they need to care for their children.
Facts for Prelims:
§ UNICEF has launched ‘Super Dads’ campaign
which aims to break down barriers preventing fathers from playing an active
role in their young children’s development.
§ The campaign celebrates Father’s Day –
recognised in more than 80 countries in June – and focuses on the importance of
love, play, protection and good nutrition for the healthy development of young
children’s brains.
Sources: the hindu.
Paper 3:
Topic:
Awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers, robotics, nano-technology.
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array
Context: Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
Array has uncovered convincing evidence for three young planets orbiting within
a protoplanetary disk – or planet-forming disk – around an infant star. The
star is called HD 163296. It’s 330 light-years from Earth in the direction of
the constellation Sagittarius.
About ALMA telescope:
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
Array (ALMA) is an international partnership of the European Southern
Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National
Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan, together with NRC (Canada), NSC
and ASIAA (Taiwan), and KASI (Republic of Korea), in cooperation with the
Republic of Chile.
§ ALMA -the largest astronomical project in
existence- is a single telescope of revolutionary design, composed of 66 high
precision antennas located on the Chajnantor plateau, 5000 meters altitude in
northern Chile.
§ ALMA allows scientists to unravel
longstanding and important astronomical mysteries, in search of our Cosmic
Origins.
What’s important?
For Prelims and Mains: About ALMA telescope.
Sources: the hindu.
Topic:
Conservation related topics.
Swajal Scheme
Context: The government recently launched Swajal
schemes in 115 aspirational districts of the country. It will involve an outlay
of Rs 700 crores through flexible-funds under the existing National Rural
Drinking Water Programme (NRDWP) budget.
What is Swajal?
§ Swajal is a community owned drinking water
programme for sustained drinking water supply.
§ Under the scheme, 90% of the project cost
will be taken care by the Government and the remaining 10% of the project cost
will be contributed by the community. The Operations and management of the
project will be taken care by the local villagers.
About NRDWP:
The NRDWP was started in 2009, with a major
emphasis on ensuring sustainability (source) of water availability in terms of
potability, adequacy, convenience, affordability and equity. NRDWP is a
Centrally Sponsored Scheme with 50: 50 fund sharing between the Centre and the
States.
Facts for Prelims:
Water is a State subject and rural water
supply has been included in the Eleventh Schedule of the Constitution among the
subjects that may be entrusted to Panchayats by the States.
What’s important?
For Prelims and Mains: Key features of SWAJAL
and NRDWP.
Sources: pib.
Facts for Prelims:
“Water Productivity Mapping of Major Indian
Crops”:
What is it? It is a book published by NABARD.
§ The book is based on study of 10 important
crops. The ten important crops include rice, wheat, maize, pulses, oilseeds,
sugarcane, cotton and potato etc.
§ The book suggests to realign cropping pattern
keeping in view water scarcity of irrigation, ration irrigation supplies in
canal irrigation system, improve micro-irrigation and invest in water
harvesting and artificial recharge and encourage participatory irrigation
management through water user association and farmer’s producer organisation.
Mt Deotibba:
Why in News? An all women Naval
mountaineering team recently summited Mount Deotibba.
About Mt Deotibba: Mt Deotibba is the second
highest peak (6001M) in the Pir-Panjal range in Himachal Pradesh.
Apache helicopters:
Context: The US has approved a deal to sell
six AH-64E Apache helicopters to India for $930 million as well as Hellfire and
Stinger missiles to bolster the country’s ability to defend its homeland and
deter “regional threats”.
About Apache helicopters:
§ The AH-64 Apache is a multi-role combat
helicopter and is used by the US Army and a number of international defence
forces.
§ It is equipped with all-weather and
night-fighting features apart from an advanced weapons system.
§ The Apache has advanced laser, infrared, and
target acquistion designation, including other systems, to locate, track and
attack targets.
§ It also has stealth characteristics, advanced
sensors and beyond-visual-range missiles.
Pinaka rocket:
Context: The indigenous Pinaka rocket system
of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) is being evolved
into a precision-guided missile, with enhanced range and accuracy to hit its
targets.
About Pinaka:
§ The rocket has been developed by the Armament
cluster of the DRDO, with a lead from Pune-based Armament Research and
Development Establishment (ARDE).
§ It is used to neutralize the enemy’s
positions that are strategically important for the enemy. The advanced versions
of this system can also be used to conduct surgical strikes even without
entering into the enemy area.
§ The launcher can fire 12 rockets with 1.2
tonnes of high explosives within 44 seconds and destroy a target area of
4-square km at a time.
§ Pinaka is capable of working in different
modes – autonomous mode, stand-alone mode, remote mode and manual mode.
§ The second variant of Pinaka, known as
Mark-II, has a maximum range of 75 km.
§ DRDO is working with Israel’s IMI to develop
Pinaka Mark-III which will use IMI’s Trajectory Correction System (TCS) that
will enhance the accuracy of the attack.
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