Seeking Medical Care Now a Financial Gamble in India
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Seeking Medical Care Now a Financial Gamble in India

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Seeking medical care has become a financial gamble for many Indians today. The cost of accessing quality healthcare has risen steadily, leaving many families weighing the price of treatment against other essential household expenses. India continues to experience one of the highest rates of medical inflation in Asia, with medical costs projected to rise by 11.5% in 2026, well above the global average, according to the Aon Global Medical Trend Rates Report 2026.

This means healthcare expenses are increasing faster than the general cost of living, making quality healthcare less affordable for many households. The reasons behind this trend are complex. Medical care today relies on advanced diagnostic technologies, robotic and minimally invasive surgeries, specialized medicines, and highly skilled healthcare professionals.

At the same time, hospitals face rising costs related to infrastructure, digital health systems, regulatory compliance, imported medical equipment, and workforce shortages. India is also witnessing a growing burden of chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer, which require long-term treatment and continuous monitoring. These factors have collectively pushed healthcare costs upward.

For patients, the financial burden often begins even before treatment starts. A consultation with a specialist, followed by recommended blood tests or diagnostic imaging, can cost several thousand rupees in many private hospitals. While these investigations are medically necessary and contribute to accurate diagnosis, they can place immediate pressure on household finances, especially for families without comprehensive insurance coverage.

Affordability increasingly influences healthcare-seeking behavior. Financial constraints remain one of the reasons many people either delay treatment or do not seek medical care, particularly among economically vulnerable households. Such decisions are rarely a matter of negligence; more often, they reflect the difficult choices families make while balancing healthcare with education, housing, food, and other essential expenses.

The consequences of delayed treatment can be serious. Many common conditions can be treated effectively if detected early. However, postponing medical attention often leads to complications that require longer hospital stays, more intensive interventions, and significantly higher treatment costs.

In many cases, what could have been managed through timely consultation becomes a far greater financial and medical burden later. Preventive healthcare remains one of the most effective ways to reduce long-term healthcare costs, yet it often receives less attention than curative care. Regular health check-ups, early screening, vaccinations, and lifestyle modifications not only improve health outcomes but can also reduce the need for expensive hospital-based treatment.

India has made notable progress in reducing the financial burden on households. According to the National Health Accounts Estimates 2022–23, out-of-pocket expenditure now accounts for about 43.4% of the country’s total health expenditure, a significant decline from around 64% a decade ago. This improvement reflects increased public health spending and wider insurance coverage.

Nevertheless, nearly half of healthcare spending still comes directly from patients’ pockets, particularly for outpatient consultations, medicines, diagnostics, and treatments that may not be fully covered under insurance. Government initiatives such as Ayushman Bharat – Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY) have played an important role in expanding financial protection for economically vulnerable families by providing cashless hospitalization for eligible beneficiaries. Several state governments have also strengthened their own health insurance schemes.

These initiatives represent meaningful progress towards reducing catastrophic healthcare expenditure. To make healthcare more affordable, a broader and more coordinated approach is required. Expanding investment in public healthcare infrastructure, particularly at the primary and district levels, can reduce dependence on expensive tertiary hospitals by enabling early diagnosis and timely treatment closer to people’s homes.

Strengthening preventive healthcare programs should receive equal priority, as preventing disease is invariably less expensive than treating advanced illness. Greater transparency in healthcare pricing is equally important. Patients should have access to clearer estimates of treatment costs before procedures are undertaken.

Standardized billing practices and wider use of digital health records can improve trust and reduce unexpected financial burdens. At the same time, insurance products should gradually evolve to provide better coverage for outpatient care, diagnostics, and preventive services, encouraging people to seek medical advice early rather than waiting until hospitalization becomes unavoidable. Healthcare should never become a privilege determined by one’s financial capacity.

A strong healthcare system is measured not only by its advanced technology or specialized treatments but also by how confidently ordinary people can access care when they need it. The author is a Communications Expert with Assam Skill University Project. Views expressed are personal.

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