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“In a country of 125 crore people it is not an easy job to provide healthcare to all. There are various challenges which we have to meet…When it comes to government’s expenditure, our healthcare sector accounts for 1.16 per cent of the GDP.
“But, I want to assure you, and our prime minister also talks about it. And, the PM has aimed that the GDP share of the healthcare sector should be increased to 2.5 per cent, and for that expenditure can be made,” Singh said. The minister, in his speech, also hailed Sir Ganga Ram and his legacy, saying he is remembered both in India and Pakistan for his contribution, despite the partition in 1947.
Highlighting the challenges in terms of number of doctors and nurses, and infrastructural needs, Singh said, the government wanted to “encourage investment in this field”. “If one looks at the current scenario in India, we have 0.6 doctors per thousand of population and 0.8 nurses per thousand of population, while the number of beds per thousand stands at 1.5. And, the situation is not so good at global level too,” he said.
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Sir Ganga Ram, an engineer by profession, was born on April 13, 1851 in a village in Punjab province of British India. He established the SGRH in 1920s in Lahore which still functions by the same name, even after partition. The SGRH in Delhi was inaugurated in 1954 by then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru.