Syllabus: GS1/ Society, GS2/ Health/ Governance, GS3/ Economy
Context
- India’s rapidly ageing population is exposing the limitations of its hospital-centric healthcare system, creating a need for a comprehensive long-term care ecosystem for senior citizens.
Need for a Senior Care System
- According to the UNFPA India Ageing Report 2023, the country’s elderly population is expected to rise from nearly 149 million at present to around 347 million by 2050, meaning one in every five Indians will be above 60 years of age.
- The NITI Aayog 2024 position paper on senior care highlights that over 75% of elderly Indians suffer from at least one chronic disease, while only about 18% possess any form of health insurance coverage.
- Elderly citizens increasingly face multiple health conditions simultaneously, including Hypertension, Diabetes, Arthritis, Parkinson’s disease etc.
- These conditions require continuous monitoring, rehabilitation, and coordinated care rather than short-term hospital treatment alone.
- Urbanisation and the rise of nuclear families are reducing the traditional family-based support available to elderly citizens.
Structural Gaps in India’s Senior Care System
- Hospital-Centric Healthcare Model: India’s healthcare system is largely designed to treat acute illnesses whereas elderly citizens often require continuous and integrated care across multiple specialties.
- Shortage of Geriatric Specialists: India has fewer than 1,000 certified geriatricians for a senior population exceeding 150 million.
- Geriatric medicine continues to remain a neglected medical specialty with limited training opportunities.
- Poor Medical Supply Chains: Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities often face shortages of medicines, assistive devices, rehabilitation equipment, medical consumables etc.
- Fragmented Digital Health Systems: Healthcare records are not seamlessly integrated across hospitals, clinics, and home-care providers.
- Remote monitoring systems and telemedicine services remain underdeveloped for chronic elderly care.
Government Efforts Towards Senior Care in India
- Atal Pension Yojana (APY): Launched in 2015 to ensure old-age income security for unorganised sector workers. It provides a guaranteed monthly pension (₹1,000–₹5,000) post-60 years.
- Rashtriya Vayoshri Yojana (RVY): Launched in 2017 to distribute assistive living devices (hearing aids, walking sticks, wheelchairs, etc.) to BPL senior citizens or those with income below ₹15,000/month.
- Senior Care Ageing Growth Engine (SAGE) Portal: Promotes start-ups and innovation in elderly care services, encouraging the growth of the silver economy.
- Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY: It Extends ₹5 lakh annual health coverage to around 6 crore senior citizens aged 70 years and above, across 4.5 crore families.
- Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007: Makes it a legal obligation for children and heirs to provide maintenance to their parents.
- Mandates state governments to establish old-age homes and ensure senior welfare services.
Way Ahead
- Skilled Workforce Development: Accredited training programmes should be developed for nurses, caregivers, physiotherapists, and care companions.
- Home-Based and Community Care: Home healthcare services should be expanded to reduce unnecessary hospitalisation among senior citizens.
- Telemedicine and remote monitoring systems should be strengthened for chronic disease management.
- Digital Health Infrastructure: Elderly care services should be integrated with the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM).
- Encourage Innovation in the Silver Economy: Support start-ups and enterprises developing assistive technologies, AI-based health monitoring tools, and user-friendly applications tailored for elderly needs.
- Changing Social Attitudes: Society must increasingly recognise professional elderly care as a responsible extension of family support rather than abandonment of responsibility.
Source: TH
Previous article
News In Short 08-05-2026
Next article
Supreme Court on Election Commission Appointments