Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PUNJAB STATE ELECTRICITY BOARD & ANR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI JASBIR SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/02/1999
BENCH:
M.Srinivasan, S.N.Phukan,
JUDGMENT:
DER
Leave granted.
The respondent’s son had problem of growth in his
height which was, in medical terms, attributed to disease of
pituitary glands. Injection Norditropin was prescribed for
treatment. The claim of the respondent for reimbursement of
the medical expenses incurred on purchase of the said
injection to the tune of Rs. 3,13,200/- was rejected by the
appellant Board. The respondent, thereupon, filed a writ
petition seeking a direction for reimbursement of the said
amount with interest in the High Court. The writ petition
was resisted primarily on the ground that the policy of the
Board was not to reimburse expenses on "imported medicines".
The High Court noticed that the drug in question was
not available in India and that the same was an imported
drug. The High Court, however, allowed the writ petition
observing that the respondent’s son had a serious problem
and that since the imported drug had been duly prescribed by
the doctor at the Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Sciences, Chandigarh the respondent was entitled to be
reimbursed for the expenses incurred in purchasing the
imported drug. The Bench observed:
"In fact, instances are not lacking were
people have gone abroad for treatment and the
expenses have been paid by the State. Surely,
if a particular medicine is not available in
India and has to be imported, nobody can help.
A poor patient has to import the medicine and
take it. This is precisely what appears to have
happened in the present case. Still further no
reason whatsoever has been advanced in the
written statement to indicate as to why a person
is not entitled to reimbursement of expenses
incurred by him on account of the import of
medicine. It can be imagined that if a drug is
available in India and yet a person chooses to
import a particular medicine and spends money
which is avoidable, the competent authority may
take the view that no re-imbursement should be
allowed or that it should be confined to the
expense which the patient would have incurred on
getting the drug within the country. However,
it is not even suggested in the present case
that the drug is available in India. In such a
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situation, it appears fair to assume that this
life saving drug had to be imported. That being
so, there would be no reasonable basis for
declining to reimburse the expenses."
Aggrieved by the direction issued by the High Court
to re-imburse the amount together with interest, the Board
is in appeal by special leave.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties and
examined the record.
It is an admitted case of the parties that the
policy of the Government of India, which has also been
adopted by the Govt. of Punjab and the Board, is that where
the drugs manufactured in India have proved ineffective and
the prescription of some imported life saving drug is
imperative for "saving the life of the patient", such a drug
can be prescribed and the patient can procure the same
either by placing an order with the foreign firm or
otherwise and when that is done and the certificate is
issued by the Chief Medical Officer of the District/Medical
Superintendent of the hospital to the effect that he is
satisfied that the drug in question is considered absolutely
essential to "save the life of the patient", reimbursement
of costs of the drug, excluding the packaging charges,
customs duty from charges etc. is permissible. The High
Court, however, appears to have assumed that the drug in
question was a "life saving drug". The certificate issued
by the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences,
Chandigarh which is available on the record at page 32,
shows that the disease was not life threatening and
Norditropin injection is "not a life saving drug". The
submission of learned counsel for the respondent that since
the son of the respondent was suffering from a chronic
disease, he was entitled to reimbursement of the medical
expenses including the expenses incurred on the imported
medicine on the basis of the instructions dated 1.1.1991
does not appear to be correct. A careful perusal of the
instructions dated 1.1.91 shows that it only lists certain
chronic diseases, the treatment for which can be done either
as an out-door patient i.e. without being admitted in the
hospital or by admission in the hospital. Vide para 2 of
those instructions, no reimbursement limit has been fixed as
an out-door patient for the employees and pensioners of the
State Governments. These general instructions, however,
have to be read along with the specific instructions
contained in the Government of India instructions dated
21.7.1972 and the instructions issued by the Board in 1997
declaring as a policy of the Board that reimbursement of
imported drug shall be permitted only where the imported
drug is a "life saving drug". It becomes obvious from joint
reading of various instructions (supra) that reimbursement
of the drugs, whether imported by the patient himself or
purchased from a chemist who has imported those drugs, is
permissible only where the imported drug is considered as
absolutely essential to "save the life of the patient". It
is not in dispute that the drug in question was essential
for "saving the life of the patient". That the disease of
the patient was a "chronic disease" does not mean that it
was "life threatening" in view of the unambiguous
certificate issued by the PGI, as referred to above. The
Board was, therefore, perfectly justified on the basis of
instructions referred to above and its policy decision, to
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decline to reimburse the medical expenses incurred on the
purchase of the imported drug Norditropin, being not a "life
saving drug". Since, the High Court wrongly assumed the
drug to be a "life saving drug" it clearly fell in error in
issuing the direction for reimbursement of the amount. The
judgment of the High Court under the circumstances cannot be
sustained.
This appeal, therefore, succeeds and is allowed. The
judgment of the High Court is set aside. The writ petition,
filed before the High Court shall stand dismissed. No costs.