India is in the midst of an epidemiological transition. The India State-Level Disease Burden Initiative reported that Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) from NCDs and injuries have together exceeded those from communicable diseases in every state of India, contributing 57–86% of the total DALYs among the Indian states in 2016 (ICMR, PHFI & IHME, 2017). Therefore, there is a need for the country and its states to pay as much policy attention to NCDs as they do to communicable diseases (Bhargava & Paul, 2018) and maternal and child health. Not only is there a need for appropriate policy measures to be in place, but there is also a need for these measures and programmes to achieve the appropriate levels of coverage and reach, for them to translate into health outcomes at scale for the population.
Given that health is a state subject in India, and that the execution of NCD-related policies and programmes is in the hands of states, there is also a need to assess the level of importance given by state governments to NCDs in their health decision-making and budget allocation. It is also needed to understand why some states have done better than others in adopting and implementing policies related to NCDs.
Keeping in mind the adoption of major international (UN and WHO) commitments related to NCDs since the UN Political Declaration on NCDs of 2011, it is also pertinent to assess the level of progress achieved at the national level and the Indian states with respect to the targets and indicators adopted for operationalizing such commitments. So, in a study commissioned by World Health Organization, GRAAM believes, that tracking these targets would shed light on the NCD-related health outcomes which may have been shaped by the various NCD-related policies and programmes adopted over the years.
The purpose of the study is to map the landscape of NCD related policy at the national and state levels, and to review and analyse the performance of NCD related policies and programmes. The specific objectives of the study are as follows: