It is the state's responsibility to provide access to public health care management for the poor and vulnerable, as the cost of curative care is disproportionately higher among lower income groups, the majority of whom are Dalits. India's population health has significantly improved during the past 70 years. The disparity across social groupings is still rather large, though. Low health status is clearly associated with poverty, being a woman, living in a rural area, belonging to a tribal ethnic group, being a scheduled caste (SC), and belonging to particular minority groups. In order to guarantee health fairness, it is necessary to review the environment and policy implementation regime. The purpose of this article is to provide context for relevant healthcare concerns and challenges by examining a few key health, poverty, illness-related costs, and coping techniques across social groupings indicators. The conceptual foundation for the health effects of public health care management's globalisation is described in this study. An examination of the main social determinants influencing population health is known as the social determinant of health.