The ambitious National Urban Health Mission (NUHM), aimed at providing adequate and efficient urban
public health delivery system for the urban poor, was launched here today.
Union Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad
formally launched the nationwide scheme, saying it would cover 779 urban areas with over 50,000 population by March 2015 across the country. In Karnataka
, it was launched at select cities, includingBangalore
, Mangalore and Mysore, Ullal and Bagalkot. The central government will share 80 per cent of the cost to implement the programme, Azad said. He said Primary Health Centres, sub-centres and referral units would be strengthened in urban areas and be manned by Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANMs). "These centres will be visited by mobile health check-up vans which will have two doctors, two nurses and a pharmacist," he said. It is estimated that the NUHM will cover a population of over 220 million people, of which an estimated 77.5 million are poor and vulnerable, the minister said. The scheme also aims at giving more thrust to sanitation, clean drinking water, vector control and other related issues. Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said the scheme would benefit migrant labourers, slum-dwellers, rag pickers and other marginalised sections of society.