The National Rural Health Mission was launched on 12th April 2005, to provide accessible, affordable and accountable quality health services to the poorest households in the remotest rural regions. National Health Mission (NHM) approved by the Cabinet on 1st May, 2013, with National Urban Health Mission (NUHM) as the new sub-mission, besides existing NRHM. Annual Common Review Mission has been one of the important monitoring mechanisms under NHM. Eleven CRMs have been undertaken so far and have provided valuable understanding of the strategies and programmes.
The 11th Common Review Mission (CRM) was being held from November 03 to November 10, 2017, to review implementation progress of the National Health Mission in sixteen states. The focus of the CRM was to undertake a rapid assessment of the implementation status of NHM and its key strategies and priority areas, analyze strengths and challenges with respect to strengthening health systems, identify trends in progress of key indicators, particularly relating to coverage, equity and affordability, document innovations and best practices, evaluate the readiness of the state to undertake implementation of new initiatives, and review the progress and coordination mechanisms with various partners in the context of High Priority Districts (HPDs) and Left Wing Extremism (LWE) Affected Districts. Of particular focus during the assessment was to assess interventions/strategies undertaken at state, district and sub district levels to address equity, issues of social exclusion and reaching the marginalized in urban and rural areas. The 11th CRM covered sixteen states. Six of these were in the High Focus States category: (Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh), four are in the North East: (Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, and Nagaland), and six were Non-high Focus States: (Haryana, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Punjab, Telangana, and West Bengal).
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11th CRM - Report | (6.70 MB) |