Jadhav was responding to a question on whether the government proposed to cover citizens aged 70 and above by expanding Ayushman Bharat through the launch of a national health claims exchange and if an expert panel had been set up to strengthen the format of the scheme for the planned expansion.
The minister, in a written reply, said all members of eligible families, irrespective of age, were covered under Ayushman Bharat – Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana.
The scheme provides health insurance cover of Rs 5 lakh per family per year for secondary and tertiary care hospitalisation to 55 crore individuals, corresponding to 12.34 crore families, he said.
“No expert committee has been set up for extending the health benefits to cover senior citizens aged 70 and above,” he stated.Initially, 10.74 crore beneficiary families were identified on the basis of the 2011 socio-economic caste census, using select deprivation and occupational criteria separately for rural and urban areas.In January 2022, the beneficiary base was expanded to 12.34 crore families and states and Union Territories were given the flexibility to use other digitised databases of similar socio-economic conditions for identification of beneficiaries under the scheme.
Accordingly, they were provided Aadhaar-seeded databases of poor and vulnerable families for verification under the scheme.
A beneficiary may directly visit any empanelled public or private hospital around the country to avail themselves of cashless treatment benefits.
Based on the diagnosis done by the hospital, eligible beneficiaries are provided treatment free of cost. Post treatment, the beneficiary is discharged and the hospital submits the claim for reimbursement, Jadhav stated.
The scheme is being implemented in 33 states and Union Territories except the NCT of Delhi, West Bengal and Odisha, he said.
Responding to another question, Jadhav said 34 insurers and third-party administrators were live and approximately 300 hospitals ramping up to start sending their claims on the National Health Claims Exchange (NHCX), which aims to streamline and fasten health insurance claim processing, as on July 21.
He said the government built the NHCX gateway under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission.
It aims to streamline and standardise health insurance claim processing, enhance efficiency in the insurance industry and improve patient experience.
It serves as a gateway for exchanging health claim information among insurers, third party audit, healthcare providers, beneficiaries and other relevant entities and ensures interoperability, machine-readability, auditability and verifiability, making the information exchange accurate and trustworthy, the minister said.
This system will enhance efficiency and transparency in the insurance industry, benefiting policyholders and patients, he added.
Supported by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India and the General Insurance Council, the NHCX will enable standardised and faster health insurance claim processing, Jadhav said.