As India accelerates its growth across infrastructure, technology, and global influence, noted radiologist and public health advocate Dr. Sunita Dube is urging the nation to focus equal attention on a foundation she believes is even more powerful — the health of its people.
In her Vision 2026–27 roadmap, Dr. Dube emphasizes that healthcare must move from being a policy sector to becoming a central pillar of national development. According to her, a nation’s true strength is not measured only in economic numbers, but in how well its citizens can live, work, and thrive without preventable illness or financial hardship due to medical costs.
Ground Realities Doctors Witness
Drawing from years of medical practice, Dr. Dube highlights everyday challenges faced by ordinary Indians. From children suffering from preventable diseases to cancer patients arriving too late for effective treatment, she says delayed access and limited screening continue to cost lives. Rural families, in particular, often travel long distances for basic care, and many still face heavy out-of-pocket expenses that push them into debt.
She also points to workforce gaps and infrastructure shortages. With doctor–patient ratios below global recommendations and many Primary Health Centres lacking adequate diagnostics, medicines, and trained staff, the healthcare burden is growing — especially as lifestyle diseases like diabetes, heart disease, and cancer rise steadily.
Health as a Fundamental Right
Dr. Dube stresses that while India’s courts have linked the right to health with the constitutional right to life, practical access remains uneven. She advocates for explicit recognition of health as a Fundamental Right and for healthcare to be strengthened through greater coordination between central and state governments.
A key part of her proposal includes raising public healthcare spending to 5% of GDP, which she describes as a long-term national investment rather than an expense. Such funding, she says, could transform rural health systems, expand early disease detection, ensure reliable medicine supply, and strengthen the medical workforce in underserved regions.
Prevention, Training, and Public Participation
Beyond hospitals, Dr. Dube calls for a strong focus on prevention. She recommends making health education part of school and college curricula and expanding CPR and emergency response training for citizens.
Through MedscapeIndia, she has already helped lead large-scale CPR awareness and training drives under the Fit India movement. She notes that structured proposals, including funding support for nationwide rollout and healthcare worker safety, have been formally submitted to government authorities, and she remains optimistic about future collaboration.
Protecting Healthcare Professionals
Another core concern is the safety and dignity of medical workers. Dr. Dube supports a dedicated national law for the protection of healthcare professionals, along with fast-track legal mechanisms and institutional safeguards. She believes a secure working environment is essential for quality care and public trust.
She also suggests transparent systems for skill assessment and incentives to encourage doctors to serve in Tier II and Tier III cities, improving equity in healthcare access.
A Healthier Nation, A Stronger Economy
According to Dr. Dube, investing in health would produce measurable national benefits — reducing catastrophic medical spending, improving early diagnosis of major diseases, and boosting productivity. Healthier citizens, she argues, directly strengthen economic resilience and innovation.
Her broader message is clear: clean water, safe food, clean air, and preventive care are as important as hospitals. She envisions health becoming a nationwide movement, supported by coordinated policies, research investment, and community participation.
A Call for Priority and Action
Dr. Dube concludes that India already has the resources and governance capacity to bring meaningful reform. What is needed now, she says, is clear prioritization.
In her view, shifting health to the center of national planning is not just a social goal — it is a strategic decision that can secure India’s future strength, dignity, and global leadership.












