The scheme which was launched in May 2021, initially provided a coverage of Rs 10,00,000 and it was hiked up to Rs 25,00,000 in February earlier this year. The newer provision was announced by Gehlot, who holds the finance portfolio, when he tabled the 2023-24 Budget in the state assembly. It was his last budget before the polls.
Recalling how one of the neighbours from his village, Barli, on the outskirts of Jodhpur, benefitted from the health scheme, Sairam, a tea seller says, “My neighbour’s daughter had a fall from a second-floor balcony and had to undergo immediate head surgery. We immediately reached out to a few local Congress workers who arranged for the necessary aid and she was brought to a government hospital in Jodhpur.” Sairam says that not only the treatment was done for free but a sum was also paid post-hospitalisation. “Keeping all these in mind, why should not we bring back Gehlot ji?” says Sairam in front of his customers in Gehlot’s constituency.
While announcing the scheme, Gehlot said the budget “wasn’t presented keeping elections in mind” and that he chose to go with the “theme of social security”. In fact, Gehlot had asserted that with the scheme, Rajasthan has evolved into a national model state for the health sector. He said that one day all other states and the Centre would also have to implement (similar schemes) and urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to implement the Chiranjeevi Yojana throughout the country.