- Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot announced that doctors, who were on strike for the last 14-day, called off their agitation against the government.
- . CM Ashok Gehlot thanked the doctors for ending the strike and making Rajasthan the first state to have ‘Right to Health.’
- The doctors said their major demand was that the private hospitals that have not taken any benefit from the government in the form of land or buildings at subsidised rates should be kept outside the ambit of the RTH Bill.
- The private sector has completely been freed from the RTH Bill.
- According to the bill, every resident of the state will have the right to emergency treatment and care “without prepayment” at any “public health institution, healthcare establishment and designated healthcare centre”.
Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot announced that doctors, who were on strike for the last 14-day, called off their agitation against the government. CM Ashok Gehlot thanked the doctors for ending the strike and making Rajasthan the first state to have ‘Right to Health.’ This cooperation and coordination of yours will become a new chapter in social security, he added.
A delegation of doctors, including those from the Indian Medical Association (IMA), the Private Hospitals and Nursing Homes Association and the United Private Clinics and Hospitals Association (UPCHAR), held talks with the government and signed a memorandum on eight points.
A consensus was reached during talks between the Rajasthan government and doctors agitating over the Right to Health (RTH) Bill as the government reportedly agreed to keep the private hospitals that have not taken land or other benefits at subsidised rates from it outside the ambit of the proposed legislation.
The doctors said their major demand that the private hospitals that have not taken any benefit from the government in the form of land or buildings at subsidised rates should be kept outside the ambit of the RTH Bill has been accepted.
“I am happy that finally an agreement has been reached between the government and the doctors on Right to Health and Rajasthan has become the first state in the country to implement Right to Health. I hope that the doctor-patient relationship will remain the same in future as well,” Gehlot said.
“An agreement with the government has been reached. The private sector has completely been freed from the RTH Bill. The government will implement it from its resources and institutions. We have converted our rally into a ‘Vijay Rally’ and will hold a general body meeting to call off the agitation formally,” secretary of the Private Hospitals and Nursing Homes Society Dr Vijay Kapoor said.
A massive rally was taken out by the protesting doctors here on Tuesday to oppose the RTH Bill. The doctors have been demanding the withdrawal of the bill, which was passed by the Rajasthan Assembly on March 28.
According to the bill, every resident of the state will have the right to emergency treatment and care “without prepayment” at any “public health institution, healthcare establishment and designated healthcare centre”