<p>The pursuit of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in India is particularly challenging given the country’s vast population and pronounced socioeconomic disparities. Although extensive research addresses specific healthcare areas, contemporary data on citizens’ healthcare access, quality, and preferences to inform UHC design are lacking. To bridge this gap, the Lancet Commission on a Citizen-Centred Health System for India conducted a Citizens Survey from November 2022 to April 2023, interviewing respondents in person in 50,000 randomly selected households across 125 districts in 29 Indian states and Union Territories. The survey comprised 141 questions covering healthcare utilization, experiences, costs, satisfaction, delivery preferences, insurance coverage, willingness to pay, health information behaviors, technology use, aspirational health norms, and electoral attitudes towards health. The survey had a high participation rate (98%) and a low non-response rate (9.5%), 70% of households were rural, 56% of respondents were male, 79% were Hindu, and 39% identified as Scheduled Caste or Tribes. The data aim to inform citizen-centric reforms, advancing a UHC responsive to India’s diverse population needs.</p>

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The Citizens Survey 2022-23: a household-level dataset on Universal Health Coverage in India

  • Anuska Kalita,
  • Siddhesh Zadey,
  • Sudheer Kumar Shukla,
  • Shubhangi Bhadada,
  • Sumit Kane,
  • Dolon Roy,
  • Mukund Kumar Chandan,
  • Jashanjot Singh Mangat,
  • Preeyati Chopra,
  • Sarika Chaturvedi,
  • Sonia Bhalotra,
  • S. V. Subramanian,
  • Vikram Patel

摘要

The pursuit of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in India is particularly challenging given the country’s vast population and pronounced socioeconomic disparities. Although extensive research addresses specific healthcare areas, contemporary data on citizens’ healthcare access, quality, and preferences to inform UHC design are lacking. To bridge this gap, the Lancet Commission on a Citizen-Centred Health System for India conducted a Citizens Survey from November 2022 to April 2023, interviewing respondents in person in 50,000 randomly selected households across 125 districts in 29 Indian states and Union Territories. The survey comprised 141 questions covering healthcare utilization, experiences, costs, satisfaction, delivery preferences, insurance coverage, willingness to pay, health information behaviors, technology use, aspirational health norms, and electoral attitudes towards health. The survey had a high participation rate (98%) and a low non-response rate (9.5%), 70% of households were rural, 56% of respondents were male, 79% were Hindu, and 39% identified as Scheduled Caste or Tribes. The data aim to inform citizen-centric reforms, advancing a UHC responsive to India’s diverse population needs.