The National Health Authority (NHA) is the apex body responsible for implementing India’s flagship public health insurance scheme, Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (AB PM-JAY). It also implements the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM), which aims to build India’s digital health ecosystem.
NHA functions under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Its importance lies in the fact that it connects two major health-governance priorities: financial protection for poor and vulnerable families through PM-JAY, and digital health infrastructure through ABDM.
Institutional Role
The National Health Authority was created to design, manage and implement national-level health protection and digital health programmes.
Its major responsibilities include:
- implementing AB PM-JAY
- developing digital health infrastructure under ABDM
- creating standards for health data exchange
- coordinating with State Health Agencies
- empanelling hospitals under PM-JAY
- monitoring claims and fraud control
- managing IT platforms for health schemes
NHA works with states because health service delivery is largely state-based. The central authority provides the framework, technology platform and overall policy direction, while State Health Agencies handle ground-level implementation.
Ayushman Bharat PM-JAY
Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana is one of the world’s largest publicly funded health assurance schemes.
It provides health cover for secondary and tertiary hospitalisation to eligible poor and vulnerable families. The scheme is important because out-of-pocket expenditure on health is a major cause of poverty in India.
Under PM-JAY, eligible beneficiaries can receive cashless treatment in empanelled public and private hospitals. NHA manages the national IT platform, beneficiary identification systems, hospital empanelment framework, claim processing architecture and fraud-detection systems.
The scheme is significant because it tries to shift vulnerable households from catastrophic health spending towards publicly supported hospital care.
Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission
The Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission aims to create a national digital health ecosystem.
Its key element is the Ayushman Bharat Health Account (ABHA), a unique digital health identity that allows individuals to link and access their health records digitally.
ABDM includes:
- ABHA number
- health facility registry
- healthcare professional registry
- digital health records
- consent-based health data sharing
In May 2026, ABDM crossed the milestone of 100 crore health records linked with ABHA, showing rapid expansion of India’s digital health infrastructure. The government also reported that ABHA creation had crossed 90 crore in 2026.
Significance
The National Health Authority is important because it combines health financing with digital governance.
PM-JAY helps reduce financial stress during hospitalisation, especially for poor and vulnerable households. ABDM, on the other hand, tries to make health records portable, paperless and interoperable.
Together, these programmes can improve:
- beneficiary identification
- hospital access
- claim settlement
- fraud detection
- health data portability
- continuity of care
- digital public infrastructure in health
NHA is also important for cooperative federalism because PM-JAY and ABDM require continuous coordination between the Union Government, state governments, hospitals, insurers, technology providers and health professionals.
Key Concerns
The main concern under PM-JAY is implementation quality. Hospital empanelment, claim verification, fraud control, package rates and availability of quality treatment vary across states.
Fraud risk is a serious issue because digital claim systems can be misused through fake admissions, inflated procedures or compromised login credentials. Recent reports from Uttar Pradesh noted suspected irregular PM-JAY claims linked to private hospitals, showing the need for stronger audit and cybersecurity systems.
Under ABDM, the main concerns relate to data privacy, consent, interoperability and digital exclusion. Digital health records are useful only when citizens understand consent, hospitals adopt the system properly and health data remains secure.
Another challenge is that health insurance does not automatically solve public health capacity gaps. PM-JAY can finance hospitalisation, but India still needs stronger primary healthcare, district hospitals, doctors, diagnostics and public health infrastructure.
Conclusion
The National Health Authority is a key institution in India’s health governance framework.
It implements PM-JAY for health assurance and ABDM for digital health infrastructure.
Its long-term importance lies in creating a system where poor households get financial protection during hospitalisation and citizens can access portable, consent-based digital health records. Its success depends on fraud control, data protection, state-level capacity and stronger integration with India’s broader public health system.



