– Monthly insulin cartridge distribution is capped despite varying patient needs based on age/weight.
– Blood sugar monitoring strips distributed per month (50) fall significantly short of the required amount (210).
– Hyperactive children face challenges managing blood sugar levels with slow-action insulin.
– Waiting periods before meals cause morning disruptions and afternoon troubles like dizziness, seizures, or loss of consciousness due to fluctuating blood sugar levels.
The ongoing adjustments in Kerala’s ‘Mittayi’ scheme highlight the complex interplay between healthcare effectiveness and financial feasibility within public welfare programs. While slow-act insulin distribution may reduce immediate costs amidst growing beneficiaries under budgetary constraints,its appropriateness for younger populations remains questionable given documented practical difficulties.
Rapid-action alternatives might better align with active lifestyles and blood sugar fluctuations typical among diabetic children but come at a higher cost that strains limited resources. Parents bearing out-of-pocket expenses further underscore economic disparities faced by lower-income families reliant on government support.
Long-term implications stress the need for more sustainable funding models or innovative solutions that balance affordability without compromising care quality-a challenge policymakers must grapple with as demand rises over time.
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