Key Points

Former Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy has accused the current government of systematically dismantling Andhra Pradesh's healthcare infrastructure. He highlighted how his administration nearly doubled MBBS seats through new government medical colleges while Naidu failed to establish even one. The Arogyasri scheme that provided free treatment up to Rs 25 lakh per family has been effectively abandoned with massive unpaid dues. Jagan warns that shifting to private insurance will leave people vulnerable during health emergencies while benefiting corporate interests.

Key Points: Jagan Slams Naidu for Dismantling Arogyasri Healthcare Scheme

  • YSRCP established 17 new medical colleges versus Naidu's zero
  • Arogyasri scheme covering 3257 procedures abandoned by coalition government
  • Nearly Rs 4000 crore dues left unpaid to network hospitals
  • Private insurance model criticized as profit-driven scam in making
3 min read

Jagan slams Chandrababu Naidu for dismantling 'Arogyasri'

Former Andhra CM YS Jagan accuses Chandrababu Naidu of looting public assets by privatizing medical colleges and dismantling free healthcare scheme Arogyasri.

"When parents are forced to sell their assets to send children abroad for MBBS seats... why is Naidu destroying the opportunity to study in Andhra Pradesh at an affordable cost? - YS Jagan Mohan Reddy"

Amaravati, Sep 5

Former Chief Minister and YSRCP President YS Jagan Mohan Reddy on Friday accused Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu of ‘looting’ public assets by privatising government medical colleges and dismantling the free healthcare scheme Arogyasri.

He alleged that Chandrababu Naidu turned cabinet meetings into platforms for decisions that benefit commissions and cronies, instead of the people.

In a post on X, YS Jagan said that Andhra Pradesh had only 11 government medical colleges till 2019. Despite serving as Chief Minister three times, Naidu did not establish even one new government medical college. In contrast, during YSRCP’s five years, 17 new medical colleges were sanctioned. Out of these, five were already completed with classes started, and admissions were held in one more after the elections. If the coalition government had taken forward the work responsibly, 12 new colleges would have been running by now, said the YSR Congress Party chief.

YS Jagan pointed out that when YSRCP came to power, Andhra Pradesh had only 2,360 MBBS seats. With the new colleges, an additional 2,550 seats were being created, almost doubling the total to 4,910. Nearly 800 seats were already filled after YSRCP completed the first set of colleges. These colleges were designed to provide half the seats free of cost and the remaining at much lower fees compared to private colleges, ensuring accessibility to poor and middle-class families.

YS Jagan accused Chandrababu Naidu of conspiring to block approvals and admissions, including writing to the National Medical Council against Pulivendula Medical College. “When parents are forced to sell their assets to send children abroad for MBBS seats in countries like Ukraine, Russia, and the Philippines, why is Naidu destroying the opportunity to study in Andhra Pradesh at an affordable cost?” he asked.

On healthcare, YS Jagan alleged that the coalition has deliberately weakened Arogyasri. In the last 15 months, out of nearly Rs 4,500 crore due to network hospitals, only Rs 600 crore was released, leaving dues of about Rs 4,000 crore. The scheme, which covered 3,257 procedures free of cost up to Rs 25 lakh per family, was abandoned. Even the “Arogyasri Aasara” benefit that provided Rs 5,000 per month to patients during recovery was stopped, with dues of nearly Rs 600 crore left unpaid.

He said Naidu is now shifting the responsibility to private insurance companies and misleading people through false propaganda. “If the government itself could not spend Rs 3,600 crore for Arogyasri, how will it spend over Rs 5,000 crore on premiums for private insurance? This is only another scam in the making,” YS Jagan warned while reacting to the decision taken by the Cabinet to implement a universal health policy to provide free healthcare to all.

YS Jagan further said that private insurers work for profit and cannot be compared with a government scheme that provided free treatment even during COVID-19. “In future health emergencies, people will be left helpless as private insurance will not cover new diseases. Naidu’s decisions are aimed only at handing over public money to his associates under the guise of premium payments,” he charged.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who works in healthcare, I've seen firsthand how Arogyasri helped millions. Privatizing healthcare always leads to profit over people. This is a step backward for Andhra's public health system.
Vikram M
Both sides need to stop playing politics with healthcare. We need sustainable solutions, not blame games. The medical colleges initiative was good - why can't the new government continue what works?
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Priya S
My brother got admission in one of the new government medical colleges. The fees were affordable for our middle-class family. If these opportunities are destroyed, only rich will become doctors. Very disappointing!
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Michael C
While I appreciate the need for fiscal responsibility, healthcare shouldn't be the first place to cut costs. There must be a middle ground that maintains quality care while managing expenses better.
A
Ananya R
The Aasara benefit of ₹5000 during recovery was so helpful for daily wage workers. Stopping this shows how disconnected politicians are from ground realities. Healthcare is a right, not a privilege!

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