Nearly 65% of the people who have health insurance are covered by private players but state-owned firms outperform them by accounting for over 61% of the collections, says a study.
"Considering that about 65% of people covered by health insurance across India fall under the ambit of private sector, the private insurers have outperformed the public insurance companies covering just 35% of people," says the study by industry body Assocham.
"However, in terms of premium it is the other way round as public insurance companies account for maximum share of over 61% in premium arising out of health insurance," it added.
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In terms of channel-wise distribution of medical insurance, individual agents bring in majority of business with 72.9% share, the study said.
However, direct business is the major contributor in terms of premium collection with about 37% share, followed by individual agents (31.6%) and brokers (21.4%).
Referrals constitute a meagre 0.1% in terms of both the numbers of policies sold as well as the medical insurance premium they collect.
The study said sparsely spread population, especially outside the metros and Tier-I is a serious challenge for the industry as it results in high cost of customer acquisition and operations.
It added that addressing the coverage gap is a huge challenge for the insurance industry because of low public spending on health along with high levels of informal or unorganised labour, a large dispersed rural population, high levels of poverty and fewer providers serving the poor.
The study suggested that priorities for government for healthcare financing must be such that it covers the basic objectives of affordability, reach and quality of services.