Universal Health Coverage (UHC) means that all people should be able to access essential health services without suffering financial hardship. It includes preventive, promotive, curative, rehabilitative and palliative health services.
UHC is not only about free treatment. It is about creating a health system where people can get quality healthcare when they need it, and where medical expenses do not push families into poverty.
Core Meaning
Universal Health Coverage has three basic dimensions.
First, it focuses on population coverage. This means healthcare should reach all sections of society, including poor households, rural communities, informal workers, women, elderly people, children and vulnerable groups.
Second, it focuses on service coverage. Health systems should provide not only hospital care, but also primary healthcare, immunisation, maternal care, disease screening, medicines, diagnostics, mental health support and emergency care.
Third, it focuses on financial protection. People should not be forced to sell assets, borrow money or avoid treatment because healthcare is unaffordable.
India’s Approach
India’s approach to UHC is based on a mix of public health services, health insurance, digital health systems and targeted welfare schemes.
The most important initiatives include Ayushman Bharat–Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana, which provides hospitalisation cover of ₹5 lakh per family per year to eligible poor and vulnerable families.
The second major component is Ayushman Arogya Mandirs, earlier called Health and Wellness Centres. These aim to strengthen primary healthcare by providing services such as maternal and child health, non-communicable disease screening, basic medicines, diagnostics and preventive care.
Other important components include:
- National Health Mission
- Janani Suraksha Yojana
- Mission Indradhanush
- National Digital Health Mission / ABDM
- free drugs and diagnostics initiatives in states
- public health insurance schemes by states
India’s UHC model is therefore not based on one single scheme. It combines primary care, hospital insurance, digital health records, disease control programmes and state-level public health delivery.
Significance
UHC is important because healthcare is directly linked with human development and economic productivity.
When people have access to affordable healthcare, they are more likely to seek treatment early, avoid catastrophic expenditure and remain economically active.
For India, UHC is important because out-of-pocket health expenditure has historically been high. Poor households often delay treatment or fall into debt due to hospital bills, medicines and diagnostics.
UHC can help in:
- reducing poverty caused by medical expenses
- improving maternal and child health
- controlling communicable and non-communicable diseases
- improving workforce productivity
- strengthening public health preparedness
- reducing inequality in access to healthcare
It also supports the Sustainable Development Goals, especially SDG 3, which focuses on good health and well-being.
Challenges in India
The biggest challenge is that health service availability remains uneven. Urban areas often have better hospitals, doctors and diagnostics, while rural and remote areas face shortages.
India also faces a shortage of trained health workers, specialists, nurses and public health professionals in many districts.
Another major concern is that insurance-based hospital cover does not automatically improve primary healthcare. If primary care remains weak, diseases are detected late and hospital burden increases.
Important challenges include:
- high out-of-pocket expenditure on medicines and diagnostics
- shortage of doctors and specialists in public facilities
- uneven quality of care across states
- weak primary healthcare in many areas
- low public health spending compared to need
- private sector dominance in secondary and tertiary care
- poor regulation of healthcare prices and quality
- digital exclusion in health platforms
UHC also requires strong public health infrastructure, not just treatment financing. Prevention, sanitation, nutrition, vaccination and disease surveillance are equally important.
Way Forward
India needs to strengthen UHC by improving both financing and service delivery.
The first priority should be stronger primary healthcare. If screening, medicines, diagnostics and early treatment are available locally, many diseases can be managed before they become serious.
The second priority is reducing out-of-pocket spending on medicines and diagnostics. These form a major part of household health expenditure.
The third priority is improving public hospitals, especially district hospitals, because they are the backbone of affordable secondary care.
The fourth priority is better regulation of private healthcare, especially package rates, quality standards, fraud control and patient rights.
Digital health systems such as ABHA and ABDM can help, but they must be supported by privacy safeguards, consent-based data sharing and inclusion of people with low digital access.
Conclusion
Universal Health Coverage means access to essential healthcare for everyone without financial hardship.
For India, UHC requires more than health insurance. It needs strong primary healthcare, affordable medicines, functional public hospitals, trained health workers, digital health infrastructure, disease prevention and financial protection.
The goal is not only to treat illness, but to build a health system where every person can receive timely, affordable and quality care.



