Health and Disease
What it means to be healthy, the difference between infectious and non-infectious diseases, how diseases spread, and how they are prevented.
The big idea
Think first
We often think of health as simply not being sick. But why can a person who is free of infection still not be truly healthy?
Being free of illness is one of the most precious things in life, yet disease is a constant challenge. Science helps us understand what health really is, why we fall ill, how diseases spread, and, most importantly, how to prevent them. This knowledge of health and disease is vital both personally and for public policy, and is highly relevant to general studies.
Health and its meaning
Health is more than just not being sick. It is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being. A healthy person is one who can function well in body and mind and live well within their community.
Health therefore depends not only on the individual but on the surroundings: clean water, good food, proper sanitation, decent housing, and a peaceful social environment. Public health is a shared responsibility, not just a private matter.
Check yourself
According to the section, health is best described as:
Types of diseases
Diseases fall into two broad groups:
- Infectious (communicable) diseases are caused by micro-organisms (pathogens) such as bacteria, viruses, fungi and protozoa, and can spread from one person to another. Examples include tuberculosis, malaria, the common cold and COVID-19.
- Non-infectious (non-communicable) diseases do not spread between people. They arise from internal causes, lifestyle or genetics. Examples are cancer, diabetes and heart disease.
Which microbe causes which disease
It helps to know which kind of microbe causes a familiar disease.
- Malaria: caused by a protozoan, the Plasmodium parasite.
- Poliomyelitis (polio): caused by a virus.
- Tuberculosis (TB): caused by a bacterium.
- Ringworm and athlete's foot: caused by fungi. Athlete's foot is a dermatophyte fungus that infects the skin between the toes. It is not a bacterium, a protozoan or a worm.
- Dengue: a viral disease, not a protozoan one. It is spread by mosquitoes. Its signs include pain behind the eyes (retro-orbital pain), a skin rash, and bleeding from the nose and gums.
Animals fall ill from the same broad groups of microbe. Among the diseases of milch (milk-giving) cattle and other livestock:
- Foot-and-mouth disease and cowpox are viral and highly contagious.
- Anthrax and black quarter are caused by bacteria.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2015UPSCH1N1 virus is sometimes mentioned in the news with reference to which one of the following diseases?
Previous-year question
2005UPSCConsider the following statements:
- Dengue is a protozoan disease transmitted by mosquitoes.
- Retro-orbital pain is not a symptom of Dengue.
- Skin rash and bleeding from nose and gums are some of the symptoms of Dengue.
Which of the statements is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2005UPSCWhich of the following diseases of milching animals are infectious?
- Foot and Mouth disease
- Anthrax
- Black Quarter
- Cowpox
Select the correct answer:
Previous-year question
2001UPSC'Athlete's Foot' is a disease caused by:
Previous-year question
1998UPSCMatch List I with List II and select the correct answer using the codes given below the lists: List I (Disease) — List II (Organism) I. Malaria — A) Fungi II. Poliomyelitis — B) Bacteria III. Tuberculosis — C) Virus IV. Ringworm — D) Protozoan Codes:
Previous-year question
1995UPSC'It begins as a single cell and grows into a merciless disease that claims millions of lives year after year. But scientists are steadily unlocking its mysteries, and the fight against it may now have reached a dramatic turning point. New discoveries promise better therapies and hope in the war against …' The disease referred to in the above quotation is:
Previous-year question
1995UPSCWhich one of the following sets is correctly matched? 1) Diphtheria, Pneumonia and Leprosy: Hereditary 2) AIDS, Syphilis and Gonorrhoea: Bacterial 3) Colour blindness, Hemophilia and Sickle cell anaemia: Sex linked 4) Polio, Japanese B encephalitis and plague: Viral
How diseases spread
Infectious diseases spread through several means of transmission:
- through the air (coughs and sneezes), as with the cold, flu and tuberculosis,
- through water and food contaminated with germs, as with cholera and typhoid,
- through direct contact, as with many skin diseases,
- through carriers (vectors) such as mosquitoes, which spread malaria and dengue, and
- through bodily fluids, as with HIV.
Knowing the route of spread is the key to stopping a disease.
Several infections cross more than one of these routes, which is why they spread so easily.
- Zika: the Zika virus is carried by the same Aedes mosquito that spreads dengue. It can also pass through sexual contact, so it is both vector-borne and sexually transmissible.
- Chikungunya: this viral fever is purely vector-borne. It spreads through the bite of an infected mosquito and does not pass through blood or shared needles.
Blood-borne infections
Some pathogens travel in blood. They spread through transfusion of infected blood, shared injecting needles, and unsterile tattoo or piercing needles.
- HIV: spread by bodily fluids and blood. Several specifics matter. Male-to-female transmission is more likely than female-to-male. A co-existing sexually transmitted infection raises the risk of catching HIV. The risk from a unit of infected transfused blood is far higher than from a single needle-stick injury. A mother can pass HIV to her child during pregnancy, during childbirth, and through breastfeeding.
- Hepatitis B: a viral infection of the liver. It is blood-borne and spreads much like HIV, including through contaminated tattoo needles. It is far more infectious than HIV. Long-term infection can lead to liver cancer.
Biofilms
Microbes do not always float freely. Many gather into a biofilm, a sticky community of cells fixed to a surface. Biofilms build up on medical implants such as catheters and artificial joints, and on food and food-processing surfaces. Cells inside a biofilm are hard to kill and can show strong resistance to antibiotics.
How plant diseases spread
Plant pathogens have their own routes of travel. They move from plant to plant by wind, by rain splash, by wind-blown dust, and by birds and insects. This is why a crop disease can sweep across a whole field once it takes hold.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2023UPSC'Wolbachia method' is sometimes talked about with reference to which one of the following?
Previous-year question
2022UPSCConsider the following statements:
- Biofilms can form on medical implants within human tissues.
- Biofilms can form on food and food processing surfaces.
- Biofilms can exhibit antibiotic resistance.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2018UPSCConsider the following:
- Birds
- Dust blowing
- Rain
- Wind blowing
Which of the above spread plant diseases?
Previous-year question
2017UPSCConsider the following statements:
- In tropical regions, Zika virus disease is transmitted by the same mosquito that transmits dengue.
- Sexual transmission of Zika virus disease is possible.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2013UPSCWhich of the following diseases can be transmitted from one person to another through tattooing?
- Chikungunya
- Hepatitis B
- HIV-AIDS
Select the correct answer using the codes given below.
Previous-year question
2010UPSCConsider the following statements:
- Hepatitis B is several times more infectious than HIV/AIDS.
- Hepatitis B can cause liver cancer.
Which of the statement given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2010UPSCWith regard to the transmission of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, which one of the following statements is not correct?
Previous-year question
1996UPSCConsider the following statements: AIDS is transmitted: I. By sexual intercourse. II. By blood transfusion. III. By mosquitoes and other blood sucking insects. IV. Across the placenta. Of these statements
Previous-year question
1996UPSCPeople drinking water from a shallow hand pump are likely to suffer from all of the following diseases except:
Prevention and immunisation
Most infectious disease can be prevented, which is far better than curing it. Prevention works at two levels:
- General measures: clean drinking water, good sanitation, hygienic food, proper nutrition and clean surroundings stop germs from spreading.
- Specific measures: immunisation (vaccination), which trains the body's immune system to fight a particular disease before it strikes.
Vaccines have wiped out or controlled deadly diseases like smallpox and polio. Public health programmes that provide clean water, sanitation and immunisation are among the most powerful tools for improving a nation's well-being.
Why some vaccines are hard to make
A vaccine is easy to design when a disease is caused by one stable germ. Malaria is hard because it is caused by several species of Plasmodium, and the parasite keeps changing the antigens on its surface. This antigenic variability lets it dodge the immune system, which is why a fully effective malaria vaccine has been so slow to arrive.
Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C are two viral infections of the liver. A few contrasts are often tested.
- A vaccine exists for Hepatitis B, but there is no vaccine for Hepatitis C.
- Hepatitis B is transmitted much like HIV, through blood and bodily fluids.
- Both Hepatitis B and C are more widespread than HIV.
- Both can stay without symptoms for many years before the damage shows.
Kinds of vaccine
Vaccines train the immune system in different ways. Several types featured in the response to COVID-19.
- Inactivated-pathogen vaccines use a killed germ. COVAXIN is of this type.
- Viral-vector vaccines use a harmless virus to carry a target gene into the body. Covishield is a viral-vector vaccine, not an mRNA vaccine. Sputnik V is also vector-based.
- Recombinant vector vaccines are made by genetic engineering. They use a bacterium or virus as the vector to deliver the antigen.
- Conjugate vaccines: the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine guards against pneumonia, meningitis and sepsis caused by pneumococcal bacteria. By preventing these infections it lowers the need for antibiotics, though, like all vaccines, it can have side effects.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2022UPSCIn the context of vaccines manufactured to prevent COVID-19 pandemic, consider the following statements:
- The Serum Institute of India produced COVID-19 vaccine named Covishield using mRNA platform.
- Sputnik V vaccine is manufactured using vector based platform.
- COVAXIN is an inactivated pathogen based vaccine.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2022UPSCWhich one of the following statements best describes the role of B cells and T cells in the human body?
Previous-year question
2021UPSCWith reference to recent developments regarding 'Recombinant Vector Vaccines', consider the following statements: 1) Genetic engineering is applied in the development of these vaccines. 2) Bacteria and viruses are used as vectors. Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2020UPSCWhat is the importance of using Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccines in India?
- These vaccines are effective against pneumonia as well as meningitis and sepsis.
- Dependence on antibiotics that are not effective against drug-resistant bacteria can be reduced.
- These vaccines have no side effects and cause no allergic reactions.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
Previous-year question
2019UPSCWhich one of the following statements is not correct?
Previous-year question
2016UPSC'Mission Indradhanush' launched by the Government of India pertains to:
Previous-year question
2014UPSCConsider the following diseases:
- Diphtheria
- Chickenpox
- Smallpox
Which of the above diseases has/have been eradicated in India?
Previous-year question
2010UPSCWidespread resistance of malarial parasites to drugs like chloroquine has prompted attempts to develop a malaria vaccine to combat malaria. Why is it difficult to develop an effective malaria vaccine?
Previous-year question
1997UPSCA major health mission carried in 1996 was:
Micro-organisms: viruses, bacteria and fungi
The pathogens that cause infection are not all alike. They divide into a few main groups, and the differences between them matter for diagnosis and treatment.
Bacteria and fungi are living cells. They can be grown outside the body on an artificial (synthetic) medium, a nutrient jelly or broth prepared in a laboratory. A virus is different. It is not a full cell and lacks the enzymes needed to make its own energy. A virus is an obligate intracellular parasite: it can multiply only inside a living host cell, so it cannot be cultured on a synthetic medium alone.
Viruses are also far more wide-ranging than students often assume:
- They infect all cellular life: viruses that attack bacteria are called bacteriophages, others infect fungi, and many infect plants.
- They thrive in the sea: ocean water is full of viruses, so the idea that none survive there is false.
- They alter the host cell: many viruses change the transcriptional activity of the cell they invade, hijacking it to make new virus particles.
Two virus families appear often in exams. Adenoviruses carry double-stranded DNA and cause some cases of the common cold. Retroviruses carry single-stranded RNA and include HIV, which causes AIDS.
A few special microbe facts are worth fixing in memory:
- Extremophiles: some microbes grow above the boiling point of water (in hot springs and deep-sea vents), some below the freezing point, and some in highly acidic conditions with a pH below 3.
- Probiotics: these are live bacteria and yeasts. They occur naturally in the human gut, and many strains help digest milk sugars (lactose).
- Aflatoxins: these toxins form on poorly stored cereal grains and oilseeds. They are produced by moulds (a type of fungus, mainly Aspergillus) and are not destroyed by ordinary cooking.
- Multi-drug resistance: pathogens become resistant mainly because people take incorrect or incomplete doses of antibiotics, drugs that kill bacteria, and because antibiotics are overused in livestock farming.
Microbes also turn industrial waste into useful products. When sugar cane is milled, two by-products remain.
- Bagasse: the fibrous pulp left after the juice is pressed out. It is burned as a biomass fuel to power the mill.
- Molasses: the thick syrup left after the sugar crystals are removed. Yeast ferments it into ethanol (alcohol). Molasses is not used to make synthetic fertilisers.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2025UPSCConsider the following statements: I. No virus can survive in ocean waters. II. No virus can infect bacteria. III. No virus can change the cellular transcriptional activity in host cells. Which of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2023UPSCConsider the following statements:
- Some microorganisms can grow in environments with temperature above the boiling point of water.
- Some microorganisms can grow in environments with temperatures below the freezing point of water.
- Some microorganisms can grow in highly acidic environment with a pH below 3.
How many of the above statements are correct?
Previous-year question
2022UPSCConsider the following statements in respect of probiotics:
- Probiotics are made of both bacteria and yeast.
- The organisms in probiotics are found in foods we ingest but they do not naturally occur in our gut.
- Probiotics help in the digestion of milk sugars.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2021UPSCConsider the following statements: 1) Adenoviruses have single-stranded DNA genomes whereas retroviruses have double-stranded DNA genomes. 2) Common cold is sometime caused by an adenovirus whereas AIDS is caused by a retrovirus. Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2021UPSCConsider the following: 1) Bacteria 2) Fungi 3) Virus Which of the above can be cultured in artificial/synthetic medium?
Previous-year question
2019UPSCWhich of the following are the reasons for the occurrence of multi-drug resistance in microbial pathogens in India?
- Genetic predisposition of some people
- Taking incorrect doses of antibiotics to cure diseases
- Using antibiotics in livestock farming
- Multiple chronic diseases in some people
Select the correct answer using the code given below.
Previous-year question
2016UPSCWhich of the following statements is/are correct? Viruses can infect:
- Bacteria
- Fungi
- Plants
Select the correct answer using the code given below.
Previous-year question
2013UPSCImproper handling and storage of cereal grains and oilseeds result in the production of toxins known as aflatoxin which are not generally destroyed by normal cooking process. Aflatoxin are produced by?
Previous-year question
2013UPSCWhich of the following statements is/are correct?
- Viruses lack enzymes necessary for the generation of energy.
- Viruses can be cultured in any synthetic medium.
- Viruses are transmitted from one organism to another by biological vectors only.
Select the correct answer using the codes given below.
Previous-year question
2013UPSCWith reference to the usefulness of the by-products of sugar industry, which of the following statements is/are correct?
- Bagasse can be used as biomass fuel for the generation of energy.
- Molasses can be used as one of the feedstock for the production of synthetic chemical fertilizers.
- Molasses can be used for the production of ethanol.
Select the correct answer using the codes given below.
How diseases affect the body
Different diseases strike different organs and tissues. Knowing the target site helps explain the symptoms.
- Malaria: the Plasmodium parasite destroys red blood cells.
- Filaria (filariasis): the worm blocks the lymph nodes and lymphatic vessels, causing swelling.
- Encephalitis: the infection inflames the brain.
- Leukaemia: this blood cancer arises in the bone marrow, where blood cells are made.
Diabetes mellitus is a common disorder of adults. Its hallmarks are a high sugar level in the blood together with a low level of insulin, the hormone that lets cells absorb glucose. When insulin is deficient, glucose builds up in the blood instead of being used.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
1997UPSCMatch List I with List II and select the correct answer by using the codes given below the lists: List I — List II I. Malaria — A) Bone marrow II. Filaria — B) Brain III. Encephalitis — C) Muscle IV. Leukaemia — D) Lymph node — E) Blood cells Codes:
Previous-year question
1996UPSCWhich of the following are associated with diabetes mellitus, a common disease in adults? I. Higher sugar level in blood II. Lower sugar level in blood III. Lower insulin level in blood IV. Higher insulin level in blood Select the correct answer by using the codes given below:
Genetic and hereditary diseases
Some diseases are inherited through genes rather than caught from outside.
A sex-linked disorder is carried on the sex chromosomes, usually the X chromosome. Haemophilia, the bleeding disorder once common in European royalty and so called "royal haemophilia", is X-linked, as is colour blindness. By contrast, conditions such as Tay-Sachs disease and cystic fibrosis are autosomal, and hypertension is multifactorial.
A second group involves the mitochondria, the tiny energy factories inside cells. Mitochondria are passed down only from the mother, so mitochondrial diseases are inherited from the mother and not the father. Mitochondrial replacement therapy (MRT), a technique that swaps in healthy donor mitochondria, can prevent a mother from passing such a disease to her child. It can be carried out either before or after in-vitro fertilisation of the egg.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2021UPSCIn the context of hereditary diseases, consider the following statements:
- Passing on mitochondrial diseases from parent to child can be prevented by mitochondrial replacement therapy either before or after in vitro fertilisation of the egg.
- A child inherits mitochondrial diseases entirely from mother and not from father.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
1999UPSCWhich one of the following genetic diseases is sex-linked?
Deficiency and nutritional diseases
Some illnesses come not from germs but from missing nutrients or harmful foods.
A shortage of a particular vitamin causes a specific deficiency disease:
- Vitamin C: its lack causes scurvy, marked by bleeding gums.
- Vitamin D: its lack causes rickets, which softens and bends the bones of children.
- Vitamin A: its lack causes night blindness. Note that night blindness is not caused by Vitamin E.
Lathyrism is a different kind of food disorder. It is a crippling disease of the nervous system caused by eating large amounts of kesari dal (Lathyrus sativus, the grass pea), which contains a neurotoxic amino acid.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2014UPSCConsider the following pairs: Vitamin — Deficiency disease:
- Vitamin C: Scurvy
- Vitamin D: Rickets
- Vitamin E: Night blindness
Which of the pairs given above is/are correctly matched?
Previous-year question
1999UPSCLathyrism is caused by excessive consumption of:
The human body: nutrition and physiology
A few facts about how the healthy body works are frequently tested.
Nitric oxide is a gas made inside the body by the lining of blood vessels. It is a vasodilator: it widens the blood vessels and so increases blood flow. Do not confuse it with nitrous oxide (laughing gas) or with the polluting oxides of nitrogen.
The contraction of muscles depends on several minerals working together. Calcium, sodium and iron are all required: calcium triggers the contraction, sodium carries the nerve signal that starts it, and iron, in the muscle pigment myoglobin, helps supply oxygen.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2024UPSCWhich one of the following is synthesised in human body that dilates blood vessels and increases blood flow?
Previous-year question
2013UPSCConsider the following minerals:
- Calcium
- Iron
- Sodium
Which of the minerals given above is/are required by human body for the contraction of muscles?
Treatment and medicines
The right medicine depends on the cause of the disease.
Antibiotics act only against bacteria. They have no role in the primary treatment of viral diseases. Swine flu, caused by the H1N1 influenza virus, is therefore not treated with antibiotics. Because it spreads from human to human, culling pigs is not needed to control it, and the whole population is susceptible since few people have prior immunity.
Some drugs serve more than one disease. Rifampicin is a broad antimicrobial drug used in the multi-drug regimens for both tuberculosis and leprosy.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2010UPSCConsider the following statements:
- Every individual in the population is equally susceptible host for Swine Flu.
- Antibiotics have no role in the primary treatment of Swine Flu.
- To prevent the future spread of Swine Flu in the epidemic area, the swine (pigs) must all be culled.
Which of the statement given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
1995UPSCWhich one of the following antimicrobial drugs is suitable for treatment of both tuberculosis and leprosy?
Biotechnology in medicine
Modern biotechnology has added powerful new tools to medicine.
- Monoclonal antibodies: these are man-made proteins built to bind to one specific antigen. By locking onto that target they support the immune response, and they are used to treat viral infections such as the Nipah virus.
- Stem cells: these unspecialised cells can renew themselves in the laboratory almost indefinitely and can grow into many tissue types. They can be obtained from several sources, not just from embryos and not from mammals only, and they are used both to screen new drugs and in medical therapies.
- Nanotechnology: it makes targeted drug delivery possible, sending medicine straight to diseased cells, and it contributes to gene therapy. Carbon nanotubes can carry drugs and antigens, work in biochemical sensors, and some types are biodegradable, though they cannot yet be made into working blood capillaries.
- Hydrogels: these water-holding gels are used for the controlled release of drugs inside patients. Their uses reach beyond medicine: they also feature in mobile air-conditioning systems and as industrial lubricants.
- Pronuclear transfer: this reproductive technique moves the nuclear material of a fertilised egg into a donor egg with healthy mitochondria, preventing mitochondrial disease in the child.
- ELISA: this is a standard test for detecting infections such as HIV. It is not a basic test for cancer.
- Rh blood group: about 85 percent of people are Rh-positive, carrying the Rh antigen on their red blood cells. The remaining minority are Rh-negative.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2025UPSCWith reference to monoclonal antibodies, often mentioned in news, consider the following statements: I. They are man-made proteins. II. They stimulate immunological function due to their ability to bind to specific antigens. III. They are used in treating viral infections like that of Nipah virus. Which of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2024UPSCIn which of the following are hydrogels used?
- Controlled drug delivery in patients
- Mobile air-conditioning systems
- Preparation of industrial lubricants
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
Previous-year question
2020UPSCIn the context of recent advances of human reproductive technology, 'Pronuclear Transfer' is used for:
Previous-year question
2020UPSCWith reference to carbon nanotubes, consider the following statements:
- They can be used as carriers of drugs and antigens in the human body.
- They can be made into artificial blood capillaries for an injured part of the human body.
- They can be used in biochemical sensors.
- Carbon nanotubes are biodegradable.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2015UPSCWith reference to the use of nanotechnology in health sector, which of the following statements is/are correct?
- Targeted drug delivery is made possible by nanotechnology
- Nanotechnology can largely contribute to gene therapy
Select the correct answer using the code given below.
Previous-year question
2012UPSCWith reference to 'stem cells' frequently in the news, which of the following statements is/are correct?
- Stem cells can be derived from mammals only.
- Stem cells can be used for screening new drugs.
- Stem cells can be used for medical therapies.
Select the correct answer using the codes given below:
Previous-year question
2006UPSCConsider the following statements:
- ELISA test is employed as the first and most basic test for an individual to detect cancer.
- Almost 50% of human beings have Rh+ blood while the remaining have Rh- blood.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2002UPSCWith reference to the latest developments in stem cell research, consider the following statements:
- The only source of human stem cells are the embryos at blastocyst stage
- The stem cells can be derived without causing destruction to blastocysts
- The stem cells can regenerate themselves in vitro virtually forever
- Indian research centres also created a few cell lines which can be developed into many types of tissues
Which of these statements are correct?
Public health programmes
In India, health is largely a State responsibility. Under the country's decentralised system, the States are primarily in charge of organising health services. Historically the public system has leaned towards curative care, treating the sick, with less spent on preventive, promotive and rehabilitative care.
Several national schemes try to fill these gaps, especially for mothers, children and the poor:
- National Rural Health Mission (NRHM): it placed an ASHA, an Accredited Social Health Activist, in each village. The ASHA is a trained community health worker who escorts women for antenatal checkups, uses pregnancy test kits, and spreads information on nutrition and immunisation. She does not herself conduct deliveries.
- Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY): a safe-motherhood scheme that aims to cut maternal and newborn deaths among poor women and to promote institutional delivery, that is, childbirth in a health facility. It is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme, funded by the Centre and run through the States, not a programme of the State health departments alone. It does not cover the care of sick infants up to one year of age.
- Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan (PMSMA): it offers fixed-day antenatal care to pregnant women at government facilities, where private specialists may volunteer their services.
- Anaemia Mukt Bharat: it supplies iron and folic acid (not calcium), runs deworming and delayed cord-clamping campaigns, and tackles non-nutritional causes of anaemia such as malaria, blood disorders and fluorosis.
- Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission: it builds digital health records with portability across the country. Its adoption by hospitals is voluntary, not compulsory.
- Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY): a health insurance scheme launched by the Ministry of Labour and Employment, not the Health Ministry. A separate scheme, the Rajiv Gandhi Shilpi Swasthya Bima Yojana for handicraft artisans, was launched by the Ministry of Textiles.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2024UPSCWith reference to the 'Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan', consider the following statements:
- This scheme guarantees a minimum package of antenatal care services to women in their second and third trimesters of pregnancy and six months post-delivery health care service in any government health facility.
- Under this scheme, private sector health care providers of certain specialities can volunteer to provide services at nearby government health facilities.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2023UPSCConsider the following statements in relation to Janani Suraksha Yojana:
- It is a safe motherhood intervention of the State Health Departments.
- Its objective is to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality among poor pregnant women.
- It aims to promote institutional delivery among poor pregnant women.
- Its objective includes providing public health facilities to sick infants up to one year of age.
How many of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2023UPSCConsider the following statements in the context of interventions being undertaken under Anaemia Mukt Bharat Strategy:
- It provides prophylactic calcium supplementation for pre-school children, adolescents and pregnant women.
- It runs a campaign for delayed cord clamping at the time of child-birth.
- It provides for periodic deworming to children and adolescents.
- It addresses non-nutritional causes of anaemia in endemic pockets with special focus on malaria, hemoglobinopathies and fluorosis.
How many of the statements given above are correct?
Previous-year question
2023UPSCConsider the following statements:
Statement-I: India's public sector health care system largely focuses on curative care with limited preventive, promotive and rehabilitative care.
Statement-II: Under India's decentralized approach to health care delivery, the States are primarily responsible for organizing health services. Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?
Previous-year question
2022UPSCWith reference to Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, consider the following statements:
- Private and public hospitals must adopt it.
- As it aims to achieve universal health coverage, every citizen of India should be part of it ultimately.
- It has seamless portability across the country.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2012UPSCWith reference to National Rural Health Mission, which of the following are the jobs of 'ASHA', a trained community health worker?
- Accompanying women to the health facility for antenatal care checkup
- Using pregnancy test kits for early detection of pregnancy
- Providing information on nutrition and immunization
- Conducting the delivery of baby
Select the correct answer using the codes given below:
Previous-year question
2009UPSCWith reference to the schemes launched by the Union Government, consider the following statements:
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare launched the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana.
- Ministry of Textiles launched the Rajiv Gandhi Shilpi Swasthya Bima Yojana.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Key takeaways
- Health = complete physical, mental and social well-being, not merely the absence of disease. It depends on clean surroundings.
- Infectious diseases (caused by microbes, e.g. TB, malaria) spread between people. Non-infectious diseases (e.g. cancer, diabetes) do not.
- Diseases spread via air, water/food, contact, vectors (mosquitoes) and bodily fluids
- Prevention is better than cure: clean water, sanitation, nutrition and immunisation (vaccination) protect health
- Viruses need a living host (no synthetic culture), lack energy enzymes, infect bacteria, fungi and plants
- Bacteria and fungi grow on artificial media; aflatoxins come from moulds; antibiotic misuse drives drug resistance
- Target organs: malaria–RBCs, filaria–lymph nodes, encephalitis–brain, leukaemia–bone marrow
- Diabetes mellitus = high blood sugar + low insulin
- Sex-linked (X-linked): haemophilia, colour blindness; mitochondrial diseases inherited only from mother, preventable by MRT
- Vitamin C–scurvy, D–rickets, A–night blindness; lathyrism from kesari dal
- Nitric oxide dilates blood vessels; calcium, sodium and iron needed for muscle contraction
- Antibiotics useless against viral swine flu (H1N1); rifampicin treats both TB and leprosy
- Biotech tools: monoclonal antibodies, stem cells, nanotech drug delivery, hydrogels, pronuclear transfer; ELISA detects HIV not cancer
- Public health: States organise services; NRHM/ASHA, JSY, PMSMA, Anaemia Mukt Bharat, Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission
- Disease microbes: malaria–protozoan, polio–viral, TB–bacterial, ringworm/athlete's foot–fungal
- Dengue and chikungunya are viral; Zika shares the dengue Aedes mosquito
- Zika also spreads sexually; HIV and Hepatitis B are blood-borne
- Hepatitis B: more infectious than HIV, can cause liver cancer; B has a vaccine, C does not
- COVID vaccines: Covishield/Sputnik V are vector-based; COVAXIN is inactivated
- Biofilms on implants and food surfaces resist antibiotics
- JSY is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme; about 85% of people are Rh-positive
You’ve reached the end of this topic.
Review the takeaways above, then mark it done.