04 Sep 2020: UPSC Exam Comprehensive News Analysis

4 Sep 2020 CNA:- Download PDF Here

TABLE OF CONTENTS

A. GS 1 Related
B. GS 2 Related
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
1. Gen. Rawat pushes for Quad
2. Afghan govt. frees 400 Taliban prisoners ahead of Doha talks
C. GS 3 Related
ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY
1. Experts flag concerns on EIA notification
SECURITY
1. Assam Rifles asked to shift base from Aizawl
D. GS 4 Related
E. Editorials
POLITY AND GOVERNANCE
1. A politics of avoidance that must be questioned
HEALTH
1. Mind the gaps in India’s health care digital push
SOCIAL ISSUES
1. Should the age of marriage for women be raised to 21?
F. Prelims Facts
G. Tidbits
1. COVID-19, NEP fuel fund raising by education technology firms
2. Relief for borrowers in moratorium case
3. Study links rice intake to diabetes
H. UPSC Prelims Practice Questions
I. UPSC Mains Practice Questions

2. Afghan govt. frees 400 Taliban prisoners ahead of Doha talks

Context:

The Afghanistan government has said that it has released 400 Taliban prisoners under an exchange deal with the militants and is expecting that the peace negotiations start soon.

Read more on the latest developments in the Afghan Peace Process covered in the 1st August 2020 Comprehensive News Analysis: War and talks.

Background:

This issue has been covered in the 10th August 2020 CNA: Loya jirga approves prisoner release.

Category: SECURITY

1. Assam Rifles asked to shift base from Aizawl

Context:

Mizoram Chief Minister has asked the Assam Rifles to shift its base from the heart of the state capital Aizawl to Zokhawsang about 15 km away at the earliest besides stepping up vigil along the border with Myanmar to check drug trafficking.

  • Mizoram shares a 404 km-long international border with Myanmar.

Details:

  • One of the battalions of the Assam Rifles had moved to the state capital in 2019.
  • The Mizo National Front government had, in 1988, asked the Assam Rifles to shift from Aizawl after the killing of 12 civilians in an encounter.
  • The stand-off between the Mizoram government and the Assam Rifles began in August 2020.
Assam Rifles
  • The Assam Rifles (AR) is a Central Para Military Force (CPMF) along with two other forces — Special Frontier Force and Coast Guard.
  • However, only the Assam Rifles functions under the administrative control of the Union Home Ministry.
  • The Assam Rifles was formed under the British in 1835 by the name of Cachar Levy and had a number of names — the Assam Frontier Police (1883), the Assam Military Police (1891) and Eastern Bengal and Assam Military Police (1913), before finally becoming the Assam Rifles in 1917.
  • It is India’s oldest paramilitary force.
  • It fulfils the dual role of maintaining internal security in the north-eastern region and guarding the Indo-Myanmar border.

Category: HEALTH

1. Mind the gaps in India’s health care digital push

Context:

  • Public consultations over the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM).

Background:

National Digital Health Mission (NDHM):

  • The NDHM envisages digitizing all data relating to all patients available not just with government and private hospitals but also with diagnostic centres, laboratories and individual practitioners of all systems of medicine.
    • Capturing data relating to patients and their digitizing could help all stakeholders including the patients, the doctors who attend to them and the healthcare facilities where they seek treatment.
    • The NDHM will help revitalize India’s healthcare delivery system by connecting doctors, hospitals and other healthcare providers in an integrated digital health infrastructure.
    • The scheme promises an end-to-end, hands-free digital experience.

For more information on this, refer to:

CNA dated Aug 16, 2020: ‘Digital Health Mission will liberate citizens’

Existing measures:

National Health stack:

  • The National Health Stack (NHS) envisages a centralized health record for all citizens of the country in order to streamline the health information and facilitate its effective management.
  • It aims to create a unified health identity of citizens.
  • The NHS seeks to employ the latest technology including Big Data Analytics and Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence.
  • A registry of over eight lakh doctors, 10 lakh pharmacists and over 60,000 hospitals is under preparation. At a later stage, online pharmacies, insurance companies and other stakeholders will be added to the ‘Stack’.
  • The scheme intends to replace existing data generation systems with new homogenised software for all machines in the health sector in the country with a central processor that will extract the relevant data from individual records.

National Health Mission:

  • The National Health Mission through the IT network is connected to most public health centres even in tribal areas. Personal health data are generated by name until the primary health centre level but not transmitted to higher levels except aggregated numerical data.
  • Many States have achieved some breakthroughs in the area of digital health within the framework of the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM).

Concerns:

  • The article discusses some of the shortcomings in the NDHM.

Extensive costs:

  • The implementation of the NDHM would require the healthcare institutions in the government as well as the private sector to upgrade their available resources and data maintenance practices.
  • There would be considerable costs involved in the transition to a new system. Public health professionals estimate the cost in thousands of crores for all government and private HIPs to upgrade their hardware and connectivity systems, training of present staff, the entry of data afresh, apart from other indirect costs.
  • This would not be financially viable for independent practitioners in allopathic and the Indian systems of medicine who run small dispensaries especially in rural areas, where there is no practice of even storing patient data on computers. Complying with the digitization protocols would entail cost burdens on them.

Data leakage:

  • Despite the claims that patient data safety and confidentiality would be ensured, the data is vulnerable given that it is getting stored in a decentralised system holding transferable data.
  • Despite the provisions like local storage of data, only anonymised data will be shared upwards, and patients’ consent will be taken every time for sharing any personal identifiable information, there are serious concerns over patient privacy.

Other problems in the health sector:

  • The NDHM will entail huge financial resources for its implementation.
  • Digitization is not the immediate problem facing the health sector. While the digitization of healthcare data could help, what many Indians face are unaddressed issues in the health sector.
  • Unreliable healthcare facilities in both the government and private sectors, difficulties in getting timely care, availability of beds and hygienically maintained hospital premises, availability of doctors physically or online, and the continuous neglect of preventive and community health initiatives constitute bigger problems in the health sector and require urgent attention and resources.

Limited benefits:

  • Many tertiary hospitals and medical colleges rarely consider diagnostic reports from peripheral centres or even the prescriptions of previous doctors and often repeat the procedures. This would render past records redundant for the patients.
  • With regard to insurance coverage, insurance schemes do not need the entire medical history of the patient and can do with the cards issued under the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana and the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana.

Federal provisions:

  • Health is under the State List. The national-level digitization plan without consultation with the state governments is a cause of concern.

Questions over accuracy:

  • While using the generated data there is a presumption that all the data entered in each patient’s file is accurate, which might not be true in all cases.

Conclusion:

  • The article argues that the NDHM may not be the best way to go about addressing data gaps and suggests that instead, the existing practices and systems for the compilation of data as in the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme and the Health Management Information System (IDSP-HMIS) could have been reformed for better efficiency and effectiveness.

Category: SOCIAL ISSUES

1. Should the age of marriage for women be raised to 21?

For information on this issue, refer to:

CNA dated Aug 16, 2020: Govt. may review the age of marriage: PM

F. Prelims Facts

Nothing here for today!!!

G. Tidbits

1. COVID-19, NEP fuel fund raising by education technology firms

What’s in News?

According to industry players, the recently announced National Education Policy (NEP) has come at the right time and can lead to a double-digit growth for the estimated $3.5 billion education technology (ed-tech) sector.

  • With schools shut and online education gathering pace, ed-tech players are firming up plans to raise funds to transform schools through digitalization and digital training of teachers even as students are confined to homeschooling.
  • They are of the opinion that the education sector is poised for a telecom and banking-like revolution.
  • It is opined that post-NEP, the ed-tech revolution in India will finally facilitate universal access to quality education for every child using digital/mobile technology.

2. Relief for borrowers in moratorium case

What’s in News?

The Supreme Court of India has passed an interim order saying that the accounts not declared as non-performing assets (NPA) as on 31 August 2020 shall not be declared as NPAs till further notice.

  • The order was passed amid apprehensions raised by borrowers whether their loans would be declared NPAs the day after the expiry of the moratorium.

Note:

  • The court is examining the question of whether compound interest (interest on interest) should be charged on loans deferred during the moratorium period.
  • The Bench is also examining the powers of the Centre and the National Disaster Management Authority to provide relief to borrowers, reeling under the financial effects of the pandemic.

3. Study links rice intake to diabetes

What’s in News?

According to a paper published after studying individuals from 21 countries over 9.5 years, higher consumption of white rice regularly is associated with an increased risk of diabetes.

  • The highest risk, according to the paper, was seen in South Asia, which had the highest consumption of white rice at 630 grams a day.
  • The study acknowledges the role of reduced physical activity as a contributing factor, as also an increase in obesity rates, while it does adjust for various other diabetogenic factors, including family history.
  • Trying to establish the link, the paper advances a couple of theories.
    • It is known that excess rice consumption leads to postprandial glucose spikes that, in turn, lead to compensatory hyperinsulinemia [excess secretion of insulin] to maintain euglycemia [normal blood sugar levels]. Over time, the b-cells become exhausted, leading to b-cell failure and diabetes, the paper states.

H. UPSC Prelims Practice Questions

Q1. Consider the following statements with respect to the Environment Pollution Control 
Authority (EPCA):
  1. EPCA is a Supreme Court-mandated body tasked with taking various measures to tackle air pollution in all the metropolitan cities across India.
  2. The body is constituted under the provisions of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  3. It is mandated to enforce the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) in the Delhi-NCR (National Capital Region).

Which of the given statement/s is/are correct?

  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 3 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
CHECK ANSWERS:-

Answer: b

Explanation:

  • Environment Pollution Control Authority is a Supreme Court-mandated body tasked with taking various measures to tackle air pollution in the Delhi-NCR (National Capital Region).
  • The body is constituted under the provisions of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • It is mandated to enforce the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) in the Delhi-NCR (National Capital Region).
Q2. Consider the following statements with respect to Paradip Port:
  1. It is a natural, deep-water port.
  2. It is the largest port by size and shipping traffic.
  3. It is situated at the confluence of the Mahanadi river and the Bay of Bengal.

Which of the given statement/s is/are INCORRECT?

  1. 1 and 3 only
  2. 2 and 3 only
  3. 2 only
  4. 1 only
CHECK ANSWERS:-

Answer: c

Explanation:

  • Paradip is a natural, deep-water port situated on the east coast of India, in Odisha.
  • It is situated at the confluence of the Mahanadi river and the Bay of Bengal.
  • Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai is the largest container port in India. It is India’s largest port by size and shipping traffic.
Q3. Consider the following statements with respect to Assam Rifles:
  1. It functions under the administrative control of the Union Home Ministry.
  2. The Assam Rifles was formed under the British in 1835.
  3. It is India’s oldest paramilitary force.

Which of the given statement/s is/are correct?

  1. 1 and 3 only
  2. 1 only
  3. 1 and 2 only
  4. 1, 2 and 3
CHECK ANSWERS:-

Answer: d

Explanation:

  • The Assam Rifles (AR) is a Central Para Military Force (CPMF) along with two other forces — Special Frontier Force and Coast Guard.
  • However, only the Assam Rifles functions under the administrative control of the Union Home Ministry.
  • The Assam Rifles was formed under the British in 1835 by the name of Cachar Levy and had a number of names — the Assam Frontier Police (1883), the Assam Military Police (1891) and Eastern Bengal and Assam Military Police (1913), before finally becoming the Assam Rifles in 1917.
  • It is India’s oldest paramilitary force.
Q4. Which of the following Indian state/s share/s international border with both 
Myanmar and Bangladesh?
  1. Tripura
  2. Mizoram
  3. Manipur
  4. Nagaland

Choose the correct option:

  1. 1 and 2 only
  2. 2 only
  3. 1, 3 and 4 only
  4. 2 and 4 only
CHECK ANSWERS:-

Answer: b

Explanation:

  • West Bengal, Tripura, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Assam share a border with Bangladesh.
  • Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh share a border with Myanmar.

I. UPSC Mains Practice Questions

  1. Increasing the minimum age of marriage for women to 21 years may not really benefit women. Comment. (10 marks, 150 words)(GS paper 1/Social Issues)
  2. Discuss the concerns associated with the proposed National Digital Health Mission. (10 marks, 150 words)(GS Paper 2/Health)

Read the previous CNA here.

4 Sep 2020 CNA:- Download PDF Here

Comments

Leave a Comment

Your Mobile number and Email id will not be published.

*

*