Does Healthcare Feature In Raisina Hill’s To-Do List?

At the Capitol Hill, while addressing the joint session of the United States Congress, on June 08, 2016, our Prime Minister Mr. Narendra Modi well articulated the following, in his inimitable style:

“My to-do list is long and ambitious. It includes a vibrant rural economy with robust farm sector; a roof over each head and electricity to all households; to skill millions of our youth; build 100 smart cities; have a broadband for a billion, and connect our villages to the digital world; and create a 21st century rail, road and port infrastructure.”

This ambitious list is indeed praiseworthy. However, as the Prime Minister did not mention anything about health care infrastructure, while referring to rapid infrastructure development in India, it is not abundantly clear, just yet, whether this critical area finds a place in his ‘to-do’ list, as well, for ‘We The People of India’.

This apprehension is primarily because, no large scale, visible and concrete reform measures are taking place in this area, even during the last two years. It of course includes, any significant escalation in the public expenditure for health.

Ongoing economic cost of significant loss in productive years:

“The disease burden of non-communicable diseases has increased to 60 per cent. India is estimated to lose US$ 4.8 Trillion between 2012 and 2030 due to non-communicable disorders. It is therefore critical for India to transform its healthcare sector,” – says a 2015 KPMG report titled, ‘Healthcare: The neglected GDP driver.’ 

This significant and ongoing loss in productive years continues even today in India, handicapped by suboptimal health care infrastructure, and its delivery mechanisms. Such a situation can’t possibly be taken for granted for too long. Today’s aspiring general public wants the new political leadership at the helm of affairs in the country to address it, sooner. A larger dosage of hope, and assurances may not cut much ice, any longer.

Transparent, comprehensive, and game changing health reforms, supported by the requisite financial and other resources, should now be translated into reality. A sharp increase in public investments, in the budgetary provision, for healthy lives of a vast majority of Indian population, would send an appropriate signal to all.

As the above KPMG report also suggests: “It is high time that we realize the significance of healthcare as an economic development opportunity for national as well as state level.”

Pump-priming public health investments:

With a meager public expenditure of just around 1.2 percent of the GDP on health even during the last two years, instead of rubbing shoulders with the global big brothers in the health care area too, India would continue to rank at the very bottom.

Consequently, the gaping hole within the healthcare space of the country would stand out, even more visibly, as a sore thumb, escaping the notice, and the agony of possibly none.

With around 68 percent of the country’s population living in the rural areas, having frugal or even no immediate emergency healthcare facilities, India seems to be heading towards a major socioeconomic imbalance, with its possible consequences, despite the country’s natural demographic dividend.

According to published reports, there is still a shortage of 32 and 23 percent of the Community Health Centers (CHC) and the Primary Health Centers (PHC), respectively, in India. To meet the standard of the World Health Organization (WHO), India would need minimum another 500,000 hospital beds, requiring an investment of US$ 50 Billion.

Moreover, to date, mostly the private healthcare institutions, and medical professionals are engaged in the delivery of the secondary and tertiary care, concentrated mostly in metro cities and larger towns. This makes rural healthcare further challenging. Pump-priming public investments, together with transparent incentive provisions for both global and local healthcare investors, would help augmenting the process.

Help propel GDP growth:

As the above KPMG report says, the healthcare sector has the ability to propel GDP growth via multiple spokes, directly and indirectly. It offers a chance to create millions of job opportunities that can not only support the Indian GDP growth, but also support other sectors of the economy by improving both demand and supply of a productive healthy workforce.

Three key areas of healthcare:

Healthcare, irrespective of whether it is primary, secondary or tertiary, has three major components, as follows: 

  • Prevention
  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment 

Leveraging digital technology:

As it appears, leveraging digital technology effectively, would help to bridge the health care gap and inequality considerably, especially in the first two of the above three areas.

A June 06, 2016 paper titled, ‘Promoting Rural Health Care: Role of telemedicine,’ published by the multi-industry trade organization -The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM) said: “With limited resources and a large rural population telemedicine has the potential to revolutionize the delivery of healthcare in India.”

As the report highlighted, it would help faster diagnosis of ailments, partly address the issues of inadequacy of health care providers in rural areas, and also the huge amount of time that is now being spent in physically reaching the urban health facilities. Maintenance of the status quo, would continue making the rural populace more vulnerable in the health care space, than their urban counterparts.

The study forecasted that India’s telemedicine market, which has been growing at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 20 per cent, holds the potential to cross US$32 million mark in turnover by 2020, from the current level of over US$15 million.

According to another report, currently, with around 70 percent overall use of smartphones, it is quite possible to give a major technology enabled thrust for disease prevention, together with emergency care, to a large section of the society.  

However, to demonstrate the real technology leveraged progress in this area, the Government would require to actively help fixing the requisite hardware, software, bandwidth and connectivity related critical issues, effectively. These will also facilitate keeping mobile, and other electronic health records.

Disease treatment with medicines:

To make quality drugs available at affordable prices, the Indian Government announced a new scheme (Yojana) named as ‘Pradhan Mantri Jan Aushadhi Yojana’, effective July 2015, with private participation. This is a renamed scheme of the earlier version, which was launched in 2008. Under the new ‘Pradhan Mantri Jan Aushadhi Yojana’, about 500 generic medicines will be made available at affordable prices. For that purpose, the government is expected to open 3000 ‘Jan Aushadhi’ stores across the country in the next one year i.e. 2016-17.

The question now is what purpose would this much hyped scheme serve?

What purpose would ‘Pradhan Mantri Jan Aushadhi Yojanaserve?

Since the generic drugs available from ‘Jan Aushadhi’ retail outlets are predominantly prescription medicines, patients would necessarily require a doctor’s physical prescription to buy those products.

In India, as the doctors prescribe mostly branded generics, including those from a large number of the Government hospitals, the only way to make ‘Jan Aushadhi’ drugs available to patients, is to legally allow the retailers substituting the higher priced branded generic molecules with their lower priced equivalents, sans any brand name.

Moving towards this direction, the Ministry of Health had reportedly submitted a proposal to the Drug Technical Advisory Board (DTAB) to the Drug Controller General of India (DCGI), for consideration. Wherein, the Ministry reportedly suggested an amendment of Rule 65 of the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945 to enable the retail chemists substituting a branded drug formulation with its cheaper equivalent, containing the same generic ingredient, in the same strength and the dosage form, with or without a brand name.

However, in the 71st meeting of the DTAB held on May 13, 2016, its members reportedly turned down that proposal of the ministry. DTAB apparently felt that given the structure of the Indian retail pharmaceutical market, the practical impact of this recommendation may be limited.

For this reason, the ‘Pradhan Mantri Jan Aushadhi Yojana’, appears to be not so well thought out, and a one-off ‘making feel good’ type of a scheme. It is still unclear how would the needy patients derive any benefit from this announcement.

Conclusion:

On June 20, 2016, while maintaining the old policy of 100 per cent FDI in the pharmaceutical sector, Prime Minister Modi announced his Government’s decision to allow foreign investors to pick up to 74 per cent equity in domestic pharma companies through the automatic route.

This announcement, although is intended to brighten the prospects for higher foreign portfolio and overseas company investment in the Indian drug firms, is unlikely to have any significant impact, if at all, on the prevailing abysmal health care environment of the country.

Hopefully, with the development of 100 ‘smart cities’ in India, with 24×7 broadband, Wi-Fi connectivity, telemedicine would be a reality in improving access to affordable healthcare, at least, for the population residing in and around those areas.

Still the fundamental question remains: What happens to the remaining vast majority of the rural population of India? What about their health care? Poorly thought out, and apparently superficial ‘Pradhan Mantri Jan Aushadhi Yojana’ won’t be able to help this population, either. 

With the National Health Policy 2015 draft still to see the light of the day in its final form, the path ahead for healthcare in India is still rather hazy, if not worrying. 

As stated before, in the Prime Minister’s recent speech delivered at the ‘Capitol Hill’ of the United States earlier this month, development of a robust healthcare infrastructure in the country did not find any mention in his ‘to-do’ list.

Leaving aside the ‘Capitol Hill’ for now, considering the grave impact of health care on the economic progress of India, shouldn’t the ‘Raisina Hill’ start pushing the envelope, placing it in one of the top positions of the national ‘to-do’ list, only to protect the health interest of ‘We The People of India’?

By: Tapan J. Ray

Disclaimer: The views/opinions expressed in this article are entirely my own, written in my individual and personal capacity. I do not represent any other person or organization for this opinion.

RHDS: A Simmering Promise in Despondency

Eric Topol, a leading cardiologist who has embraced the study of genomics and the latest advances in technology to treat chronic disease says, “We’ll soon use our smartphones to monitor our vital signs and chronic conditions in future.”

By clicking on this video clippingyou can watch how Dr. Topol in his talk titled “The Wireless Future of Medicine”, highlights several of the most important wireless devices in medicine’s future – all helping to keep more patients out of hospital beds.

In achieving similar objectives, India’s potential is indeed immense. The good news is, though in India Internet penetration has just crossed 16 percent of its total population, in absolute numbers this percentage reportedly works out to nearly 10 times the population of Australia. According to a report released by the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IMAI) and IMRB, there will be around 243 million internet users in India by June 2014, overtaking the US as the world’s second largest internet base after China. This situation must be leveraged to improve access to healthcare in the country significantly.

‘Remote Healthcare Delivery Solutions (RHDS)’

However, for several other reasons the situation is quite challenging in India. Out of its total population of over 1.2 billion, nearly 72.2 percent live in the hinterland and remote rural areas spreading across over 700,000 villages. In all these places, despite huge prevalence of diseases, inadequate healthcare infrastructure and delivery mechanisms offer an ideal backdrop to explore innovative healthcare solutions such as, ‘Remote Healthcare Delivery Solutions (RHDS)’ or ‘Telemedicine’. In that endeavor, smartphones could play a key role in improving access to healthcare for a very large number of population.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has defined ‘Telemedicine’ as:

“The use of information and communications technology (ICT) to deliver healthcare, particularly in settings where access to medical services is insufficient.”

Thus, to effectively improve access to healthcare, especially in rural India, RHDS holds a great promise.

A complex mix:

Healthcare space in India is generally a complex mix of issues related to access, availability, affordability and quality of healthcare, compounded by inadequate public healthcare infrastructure and delivery system on the one hand and expensive private healthcare facilities on the other. The degree of this complexity is rather stark in rural areas.

In a situation like this, RHDS holds a great promise to satisfy healthcare needs of the hinterland and rural India, as this would entail effective medical care, despite understaffed Primary Healthcare Centers (PHCs) and undertrained healthcare staff, with low start-up costs.

Equipped with modern Internet enabled technologies, RHDS would facilitate transmission of patient related information through SMS, email, audio, video, or other image transmissions, like MRI and CT Scans to relevant specialists of different disciplines of medical sciences located in other places. With RHDS, these specialists can monitor even blood pressure or blood glucose levels of patients on computer screens without examining them in person.

Key advantages:

The key advantages of a structured and well committed implementation of RHDS or ‘Telemedicine’ in india are as follows:

  • Elimination of many costs, including travel expenses for specialists and patient transfers – especially in a critical health situation, improving access to quality healthcare.
  • Reduction of feeling of isolation of the rural medical practitioners by upgrading their knowledge through Tele-education or Tele-Continuing Medical Education (CME) programs.

RHDS in India:

In India, RHDS initiative in form of telemedicine commenced more than a decade ago in 1999, when the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) deployed a SATCOM-based telemedicine network across the country. ISRO’s telemedicine program has now been reportedly enhanced to multi-point systems with a network of 400 centers across India.

The good news is, besides Department of Information Technology, the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare and many state governments, some well-reputed medical and technical institutes, corporates and academia have also started taking active interest in this area, especially oriented for the rural population of India.

In this context it is worth mentioning that in March 2014, Biocon Foundation reportedly partnered with Canara Bank and the Odisha Government for an e-healthcare program that aims at setting up of diagnostic facilities in PHCs to improve healthcare access to  51,000 villages.

Simultaneously, the Department of Information Technology has put in place the ‘Standards for Telemedicine Systems’ and the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare has constituted the National Telemedicine Task Force to provide further thrust to RHDS in India,.

To cite an example, US based World Health Partners (WHP) have reportedly set up an extensive Tele-Medicine network in the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP), which has received almost 35,000 calls in two years requesting for services. After receiving the calls, the patients requiring intervention were directed to WHP’s franchisee clinics in the respective areas. This model included three areas namely, Meerut, Bijnor and Muzzafarnagar.

Apollo group, Narayana Hruduyalaya, Aravind Eye Hospital and Asia Heart Foundation are also running similar system in India. Unfortunately, none of these or even all put together can extend such facilities to patients across the whole of India, just yet.

The Market:

According to a report of Infinity research the global market for telemedicine is around US$ 9 billion with a CAGR of 20 percent. However, another report quoting KSA Technopak indicates that the Indian market is currently relatively very small with a market size of around US$ 7.5 Million. Considering future growth opportunities, as deliberated here, RHDS market holds a great promise.

Telemedicine or RHDS market is classified based on the type of technology and services used and usually analyzed on the basis of telemedicine applications, such as Tele-consultation, Tele-cardiology or Tele-dermatology etc. However, Tele-consultation reportedly dominates the telemedicine services market.

To give an idea of its market potential, the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) telemedicine market was reportedly at US$ 200.5 million in 2009 and was expected to expand at a CAGR of 15.8 percent from 2009 to 2014.

The telemedicine technology market segment forms the largest segment of the overall BRIC telemedicine market and is expected to be US$ 307.4 million by end 2014 with a CAGR of 16.6 percent from 2009 to 2014. The services segment in the overall BRIC telemedicine market is expected to reach US$ 111 million in 2014 with a CAGR of 13.8 percent.

The Challenges in India:

Again there are following two critical challenges in this areas:

  • The biggest challenge is undoubtedly the broadband Internet connectivity.
  • Transmitting patients’ medical records through Internet could infringe upon patient privacy giving rise to ethics related issues, besides avoidable litigations.

I reckon, these concerns can be well addressed, if both the private healthcare providers and the Government together resolve and chart a time-bound pathway to improve access to quality healthcare in a cost effective manner to a large majority of Indian population.

Conclusion:

Various public and private RHDS solution providers are gradually getting actively engaged, though incoherent way, to create awareness about telemedicine in the country. This  brings with it a never before hope of ensuring access to quality healthcare to almost the entire population of the country.

A survey conducted in the United States highlighted that 85 percent of patients expressed satisfaction with their telemedicine consultation. Back home in India, a similar study in Odisha reported a satisfaction rate as high as 99 percent post telemedicine consultation.

Having a large base of medical and IT manpower with requisite expertise in RHDS, India holds a great promise to become a major telemedicine hub even for its neighboring countries, transforming the healthcare delivery scenario in all those places significantly.

Bundling all these, together with the increasing use of Internet enabled smartphones as explained by Dr. Eric Topol in his video clipping above, RHDS does offer a simmering promise in an otherwise despondent healthcare scenario of India.

By: Tapan J. Ray

Disclaimer: The views/opinions expressed in this article are entirely my own, written in my individual and personal capacity. I do not represent any other person or organization for this opinion.

e-healthcare: A new vista to improve access to quality and affordable healthcare in India

The concept of e-healthcare started germinating in India since 1999, when the ‘Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)’ initiated its pioneering step towards telemedicine in the country by deploying a SATCOM-based telemedicine network. This network is currently playing a key role in the evolution and development of e-healthcare in the country. ISRO, with its fine blending of application of world class satellite communication technology with modern medical science and information technology (IT), has engaged itself very seriously to ensure availability of quality and affordable specialty healthcare services right at the doorsteps of a vast majority of population living even in the distant and remote places of the rural India.

However, despite telemedicine gaining slow momentum in India, there is no law in place for ethical, affordable and patient friendly use of e-healthcare facilities in the country.  Considering its vast scope of improving access to healthcare, cost effectiveness and a convenient ways to deliver e-healthcare services to a very large number of patients, especially, located in the distant locations of the country, the law makers should urgently ensure that this important healthcare service is not misused or abused by unscrupulous elements, in any way.

Very recently, taking into consideration this critical legal requirement the Medical Council of India (MCI) has decided to soon forming a panel to address the ethical issues related to e-healthcare in India.

Delivery of e-healthcare through telemedicine:

The World Health Organization (WHO) has defined telemedicine as follows: “The delivery of healthcare services, where distance is a critical factor, by all healthcare professionals using information and communication technologies for the exchange of valid information for diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disease and injuries, research and evaluation, and for continuing education of healthcare providers, all in the interests of advancing the health of individuals and their communities.”

As stated above, telemedicine is gradually gaining popularity in India, like in many other countries of the world. This emerging e- healthcare service has the potential to meet the unmet needs of the patients located in the far flung areas, by providing access to medical specialists for treatment of even tertiary level of their ailments, without requiring traveling outside their villages or small towns where they reside.

The key objectives of e-healthcare:

1. To provide affordable quality healthcare services even to those places where these are not available due to lack of basic healthcare infrastructure and delivery issues.

2. Speedy electronic transmission of clinical information of both synchronous and asynchronous types, involving voice and data transfer of patients to distantly located experts and get their treatment advice online.

3. To effectively train the medics and the paramedics located in distant places and proper management of healthcare delivery/service systems.

4. Disaster management.

The Process:

The process can be: – ‘Real time’ or synchronous when through a telecommunication link real time interaction between the patients and doctors/experts can take place. This technology can be used even for tele-robotic surgery. – ‘Non-real time’ or asynchronous type when through a telecommunication link, stored diagnostics/medical data and other details of the patients are transmitted to the specialists for off-line assessment and advice at a time of convenience of the specialists.

These processes facilitate access to specialists’ healthcare services by the rural patients and the medical practitioners alike by reducing avoidable travel time and related expenses. At the same time, such interaction would help upgrading the knowledge of rural medical practitioners and paramedics to hone their skill sets.

The Promise:

e-healthcare is capable of taking modern healthcare to remote rural areas using Information Technology (IT), as specialists are mostly located in the cities. As majority of the diseases do not require surgery, e-healthcare would prove to be very conducive to such patients and economical too.

Relevance of e-healthcare in India:

With its over 1.2 billion population and equally huge disease burden, spreading across distant semi-urban and rural areas, where over 70 per cent of the population of the country lives, India should focus on e-healthcare to meet unmet healthcare needs of the common man, at least, located in far-flung areas. e-healthcare, therefore, is very relevant for the country, as it faces a scarcity of both hospitals and medical specialists. In India for every 10,000 of the population just 0.6 doctors are available.

According to the Planning Commission, India is short of 600,000 doctors, 1 million nurses and 200,000 dental surgeons. It is interesting to note that 80 percent of doctors, 75 percent of dispensaries and 60 percent of hospitals, are situated in urban India.

Progress of e-healthcare in India:

Equitable access to healthcare is the overriding goal of the National Health Policy 2002. e-healthcare has a great potential to ensure that the inequities in the access to healthcare services are adequately addressed by the country.

Very encouragingly, a good number of even super-specialty hospitals like, Apollo Group of Hospitals have unfolded the launch plan of ‘Healthcare India Pharmaceutical Registry (HIPAAR)’, which is an electronic drug database for reference by the doctors and patients.  Apollo Group feels that HIPAAR module will enable the patients to know whether right medications have been used or not to treat the ailment that the concerned patient is suffering from along with the information of possible adverse effects of the medicines prescribed to them.

Currently, in the dedicated e-healthcare centers of ‘Narayana Hrudayalaya group’ pioneered by Dr Devi Shetty, patients from far-flung areas can have consultations with doctors in Bangalore.

Similarly, Asia Heart Foundation (Kolkata) and Regional Institute of Medical Science (Imphal, Manipur) are currently providing multi-specialty e-healthcare through telemedicine to 10 district hospitals, which will be extended to 75 District Hospitals, shortly. At the same time, some Government hospitals also have started extending e-healthcare through telemedicine facilities, which among others will handle e-transfer of medical data of patients like, X-ray, CT scan and MRI for not only diagnosing the disease, but also for treatment and medical consultation. Department of telemedicine of Sir Ganga Ram Hospital of New Delhi is one such example.

Well reputed cancer hospital of India, Tata Memorial Hospital (TMH) of Mumbai is now well connected with B.Barooah Cancer Institute of Guwahati, Assam and K.L Walawalkar Cancer Center of Chiplun, Maharashtra. Over a short period of time TMH plans to connect with 19 such regional cancer institutes.

Today the Center for Health Market Innovations (CHMI), a global network of partners that seeks to improve the functioning of health markets in developing countries to deliver better results for the poor, profiles more than 55 telemedicine programs globally including 24 in India.

Public Private Partnership:

As the Ministry of Health and Family welfare has now constituted a ‘National Telemedicine Taskforce’, some private healthcare institutions, as mentioned above, and various State Governments like, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and West Bengal have started taking admirable initiatives to translate the concept of e-healthcare into reality, especially for the rural India. Subsequently, private e-healthcare solution providers have also started coming-up, though in a sporadic manner.  Active participation of the civil society and meaningful Public Private Partnership (PPP) projects are essential not only to get engaged in creating awareness for e-healthcare within India, but also to ensure that required blend of a high quality technical and medical manpower that the country currently possesses are effectively utilized to establish India as a pioneering nation and a model to emulate, in the field of e-healthcare.

The market of e-healthcare in India:

Frost & Sullivan (2007) estimated the e-healthcare (telemedicine) market of India at US$3.4 million is expected to record a CAGR of over 21 percent between 2007 and 2014.

More fund required for e-healthcare:

e-healthcare shows an immense potential within the fragile brick and mortar public healthcare infrastructure of India to catapult rural healthcare services, especially secondary and tertiary healthcare, to a different level altogether. Current data indicate that over 278 hospitals in India have already been provided with telemedicine facilities. 235 small hospitals including those in rural areas are now connected to 43 specialty hospitals. ISRO provides the hospitals with telemedicine systems including software, hardware, communication equipment and even satellite bandwidth. The state governments and private hospitals are now required to allocate adequate funds to further develop and improve penetration of Telemedicine facilities in India.

Issues with e-healthcare in India:

– Telemedicine will not be immune to various complicated legal, social, technical and consumer related issues.

- Some government doctors could feel that for e-healthcare they need to work extra hours without commensurate monetary compensation

- The myth created that setting up and running any e-healthcare facility is expensive, needs to be broken, as all the related costs can be easily recovered by a hospital through nominal charges to a large number of patients, who will be willing to avail e-healthcare facilities, especially from distant parts of India.

- Inadequate and uninterrupted availability of power supply could limit proper functioning of the e-healthcare centers.

- High quality of telemedicine related voice and data transfer is of utmost importance. Any compromise in this area could have a significant impact on the treatment outcome of a patient.

- Lack of trained manpower for e-healthcare services needs to be addressed quickly by making it a part of regular medical college curriculum, just as the University of Queensland in Australia has it for their Graduate Certificate in e-Healthcare (GCeH). A pool of competent professionals for e-healthcare services in the country will be a step in the right direction.

- Reimbursement procedure of e-healthcare treatment costs by the medical insurance companies needs to be effectively addressed.

Conclusion:

For an integrated and sustainable healthcare delivery model covering the entire population of the country, a robust e-healthcare strategy is absolutely essential.  Three critical success factors for e-Healthcare initiatives may be considered as follows:

  1. A comprehensive government policy
  2. Increasing level of literacy
  3. Power and telecommunications infrastructure

Unlike common perception, for greater effectiveness and better acceptance of any sustainable e-healthcare service project, the focus should be the same or rather a little more on non-technological areas like consumer mindset and competent healthcare providers than technological factors such as biomedical engineering or information technology.

A very large rural population of India living in remote areas could get access to affordable and quality health related services through e-healthcare facilities, which, I reckon, should be made to play a very special and critical role to address the healthcare needs of the common man. With its gradually increasing coverage, it is imperative that required regulatory standards and guidelines for e-healthcare are put in place across the country, sooner. Technological expertise to make e-healthcare successful is already available in India. The pioneering role that ISRO has been playing in this field is still not known to many.

Thus, to make e-healthcare successful, the country needs to create an appropriate groundswell for the same. All powerful and effective ‘Fourth Estate’ of the country should demonstrate greater interest to initiate a healthy discussion on e-healthcare by all stakeholders and play the role of a facilitator to ensure access to quality and affordable healthcare to all the people of India.

By: Tapan J Ray

Disclaimer: The views/opinions expressed in this article are entirely my own, written in my individual and personal capacity. I do not represent any other person or organization for this opinion.

Leverage the potential of ‘Telemedicine’ to effectively address the healthcare needs of India

The World Health Organization (WHO) has defined telemedicine as follows:

“The delivery of healthcare services, where distance is a critical factor, by all healthcare professionals using information and communication technologies for the exchange of valid information for diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disease and injuries, research and evaluation, and for continuing education of healthcare providers, all in the interests of advancing the health of individuals and their communities”

Telemedicine is gradually becoming popular in India, like in many other countries of the world. This emerging technology based healthcare service, will surely meet the unmet needs of the patients located in the far flung areas, by providing them access to medical specialists for treatment of even tertiary level of their ailments, without requiring to travel outside their villages or small towns where they reside. Telemedicine is, therefore, slowly but gradually emerging as a convenient and cost-effective way of treating even complicated diseases of the rural population.

The applications of Telemedicine:

1. To extend affordable quality healthcare services to those places where these are not available due to basic healthcare infrastructure and delivery issues.

2. Electronic transmission of clinical information of both synchronous and asynchronous types, involving voice and data transfer of patients to distantly located experts and get their treatment advice, online.

3. To effectively train the medics and the paramedics located in distant places and proper management of healthcare delivery/service systems.

4. Disaster management.

The Process:

The process can be:

- ‘Real time’ or synchronous when through a telecommunication link real time interaction between the patients and doctors/experts can take place. This technology can be used even for tele-robotic surgery.

- ‘Non-real time’ or asynchronous type when through a telecommunication link, stored diagnostics/medical data and other details of the patients are transmitted to the specialists for off-line assessment and advice at a time of convenience of the specialists.

These processes facilitate access to specialists’ healthcare services by the rural patients and the rural medical practitioners reducing avoidable travel time and related expenses. At the same time such interaction helps upgrading the knowledge of the rural medical practitioners and paramedics.

The Promise:

‘Telemedicine’ is capable of taking modern healthcare to remote rural areas using Information Technology (IT), as specialists are mostly based in the cities. As majority of the diseases do not require surgery, ‘telemedicine’ will prove to be very conducive to such patients and economical too.
Relevance of Telemedicine in India:

With its over 1.12 billion population and equally huge and not so well addressed disease burden, spreading across distant and remote semi-urban and rural areas where over 70 per cent of the population of the country lives, India by any standard is a country, which should focus on ‘Telemedicine’ to meet the unmet healthcare needs of the common man.

Telemedicine, therefore, is very relevant for the country, as it faces a scarcity of both hospitals and medical specialists. In India for every 10,000 of the population just 0.6 doctors is available. According to the Planning Commission, India is short of 600,000 doctors, 10 lakh nurses and 200,000 dental surgeons. Over 72 percent of Indians live in rural areas where facilities of healthcare are still grossly inadequate. Most of the specialists are reluctant to go to the rural areas. In addition, 80 percent of doctors, 75 percent of dispensaries and 60 percent of hospitals, are situated in urban India.

Telemedicine should be leveraged to bridge the gap of healthcare divide:

Equitable access to healthcare is the overriding goal of the National Health Policy 2002. Telemedicine has a great potential to ensure that the inequities in the access to healthcare services are adequately addressed by the country.

ISRO and the progress of Telemedicine in India:

The concept of ‘Telemedicine’ is relatively new in India and started drawing attention of the Government since 1999, when the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) deploying a SATCOM-based telemedicine network took its pioneering step towards this direction and is currently playing a key role in the evolution and development of ‘telemedicine’ in India. ISRO with its effective application of world class satellite communication technology with modern medical science and information technology has engaged itself very seriously to ensure availability of specialty healthcare services right at the doorsteps of a vast majority of deprived population living even in the distant and remote places of the rural India.

Government and private initiatives:

Since then the Ministry of Health and Family welfare with its initiative through information technology in some country level projects forming the National Telemedicine Taskforce, some private healthcare institutions like Apollo and various State Governments like, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and West Bengal also took admirable initiatives to translate the concept of ‘telemedicine’ into reality, especially for the rural India.

Subsequently, private telemedicine solution providers have now started coming-up, in a very sporadic manner though. Active participation of the civil society and meaningful Public private Partnership (PPP) projects are essential not only to get engaged in creating awareness for ‘telemedicine’ within India, but also to ensure that required blend of a high quality of technical and medical manpower that the country currently possesses are effectively utilized to establish India as a pioneering nation and a model to emulate in the field of telemedicine.

The market of Telemedicine in India:

Frost & Sullivan has estimated the telemedicine market of India at US$3.4 million, which is expected to record a CAGR of over 21 percent between 2007 and 2014.

Practices of Telemedicine in India:

Not only the central government of India, many state governments and private players are also entering into telemedicine in a big way with the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) playing a pivotal role, as indicated earlier. Some of the encouraging examples are as follows:

Telemedicine in Tamil Nadu:

Wi-Fi video conferencing network has now enabled ophthalmologists in the country to treat patients located in distant rural areas.

For example in an eye clinic in Andipatti village of Tamil Nadu state patients are connected through an inexpensive Wi-Fi video conferencing network with an ophthalmologist located about 15 kilometers away at the Aravind Eye Hospital in the city of Theni, for diagnosis and treatment of ophthalmological conditions. It has been reported that in the last six years eight such vision centers have been opened in the Theni district to provide eye treatment through ‘telemedicine’ to the affected population. These centers are managed by ophthalmic assistants trained to conduct a full eye examination, administer diagnostic tests, treat simple ailments and prescribe glasses. An ophthalmologist located as far away as 150 kilometers gives the final advice to the patients through videoconferencing and incurring a fraction of the expenses of what the patient would have otherwise incurred for getting treated at the district hospital of Theni.

World Health Organization (WHO) in its recent report has highlighted that about one third of the 45 million blind population of the world, live in India with majority of the causes being easily treatable cataracts and diabetes. It is worth mentioning that India has pledged to eliminate avoidable blindness in 10 years, under WHO 2020 initiative.

The Government of India is contemplating to create 20,000 more rural vision centers in the next few years.

Telemedicine in Kerala:

In Kerala selected referral Telemedicine Centers which are ‘Taluk Hospitals’ are connected to the Specialty hospitals through ISDN dial-up connection and the Telemedicine software MERCURY for creating and transferring the Electronic Medical Record (EMR) from sources like ECG, Microscope and Scanner.

A Telemedicine system for Cancer Patients called ‘CancerNet’ has also been created in the state for cancer detection, treatment, pain relief ,patient follow-up and continuity of care in peripheral hospitals (nodal centers) of Regional Cancer Centre (RCC). This facility connects RCC, Trivandrum and five nodal outreach centers. More than 3000 patients are treated or consulted in these nodal centers offering significant financial benefits to patients.

The specialty centers are located at:

• Medical College Hospital, Thiruvananthapuram
• Sree Chitra Thirunal Institute of Medical Science and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram
• Regional Cancer Center,Thiruvananthapuram
• Mental Health Centre, Thiruvananthapuram

The remote nodal centers are located at:

• Taluk Hospital, Neyyattinkara
• Taluk headquarters Hospital, Quilandy
• Taluk Hospital, Mavelikkara
• Taluk Hospital, Vythiri, Wayanad

Telemedicine in Andhra Pradesh:

Among the private initiatives the Apollo group of hospitals took a pioneering initiative in ‘telemedicine’ with a pilot project at a secondary level hospital in Aragonda village located about16 km away from the town Chittoor in Andhra Pradesh, covering a population of 5000.

Telemedicine in West Bengal:

Telemedicine for Tropical Diseases utilizing Technology developed by WEBEL & IIT Kharagpur has been developed by the state for diagnosis and monitoring of skin and blood related tropical diseases in West Bengal. The facility has been installed in School of Tropical Medicine, Kolkata and two District Hospitals. This is now being upgraded and extended to cover two referral hospitals and four District hospitals.

Telemedicine in North Eastern States:

A facility of Telemedicine Solution is being developed in Kohima Hospital of Nagaland under a Public Private Partnership (PPP) between the Government of Nagaland, Marubeni India Ltd, Apollo Hospitals and the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. Two telemedicine centers are being set up connecting hospitals in the capitals of the North-eastern states, Sikkim and Tripura with super-specialty hospital under Community Information Centre scheme of DIT. North Eastern Council of India is planning to cover all 75 districts in seven states through Telemedicine.

Allocate more fund for Telemedicine:

Telemedicine now shows an immense potential, within the frugal healthcare infrastructure of India, to catapult rural healthcare services, especially secondary and tertiary, to a different level altogether. Current data indicate that over 278 hospitals in India have already been provided with telemedicine facilities. 235 small hospitals including those in rural areas are now connected to 43 specialty hospitals. ISRO provides the hospitals with telemedicine systems including software, hardware, communication equipment and even satellite bandwidth.

In 1999, India based one of the largest healthcare providers in Asia, The Apollo Hospitals Group also entered into telemedicine space. Today, the group has quite successfully established over 115 telemedicine locations in India, It has been reported that a ‘tele-consultation’ between the experts and the rural center ranges from 15 to 30 minutes in these facilities.

The state governments and private hospitals are now required to allocate adequate funds to further develop and improve penetration of Telemedicine facilities in India.

Issues with Telemedicine in India:

- Telemedicine is not free from various complicated legal, social, technical and consumer related issues, which need to be addressed urgently.

- Many a time, doctors feel that for Telemedicine they need to work extra hours without commensurate monetary compensation, as per their expectations.

- The myth created that setting up and running a Telemedicine facility is expensive needs to be broken, as all these costs can be easily recovered by any hospital through nominal charges to the patients.

- Inadequate and uninterrupted availability of power supply could limit proper functioning of a telemedicine center.

- High quality of Telemedicine related voice and data transfer is of utmost importance. Any compromise in this area may have significant impact on the treatment outcome of a patient.

- Lack of trained manpower for Telemedicine can be addressed by making it a part of regular medical college curriculum.

- Legal implications, if arise, out of any Telemedicine treatment need to be clearly articulated.

- A system needs to be worked out to prevent any possible misuse or abuse of the confidential Telemedicine treatment data of a patient.

- Reimbursement procedure of Telemedicine treatment costs by the medical insurance companies needs to be effectively addressed.

Conclusion:

Because of a very large population of India living in remote and distant rural areas, ‘telemedicine’ would play a very special and critical role in India to address the healthcare needs of the common man. With increasing coverage of telemedicine, it is imperative that required regulatory standards and guidelines for the same is put in place across the country.

Some significant and path breaking advances have indeed been made in the field of ‘telemedicine’ in India. It is though unfortunate that enough awareness for an optimal spread of this critical facility has been created, as yet to address the healthcare needs of a vast majority of the population in India, effectively. The pioneering role that ISRO has been playing in this field is also not known to many. All powerful ‘Fourth Estate’, I reckon, should now take more interest to initiate a healthy discussion and debate on this important healthcare solution, within the civil society.

By Tapan Ray

Disclaimer: The views/opinions expressed in this article are entirely my own, written in my individual and personal capacity. I do not represent any other person or organization for this opinion.

Telemedicine – one of the unsung advances towards improving access to healthcare services in India.

Telemedicineis gradually becoming popular in India, like in many other countries of the world. This emerging technology based healthcare service, will surely meet the unmet needs of the patients located in the far flung areas, by providing them access to specialists to treat their even tertiary level of ailments, without requiring to travel outside their villages or small towns where they reside. Telemedicine is therefore emerging as a convenient and cost-effective way of treating even complicated diseases of the rural folks.The definition:The World Health Organisation (WHO) has defined telemedicine as follows:

“The delivery of healthcare services, where distance is a critical factor, by all healthcare professionals using information and communication technologies for the exchange of valid information for diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disease and injuries, research and evaluation, and for continuing education of healthcare providers, all in the interests of advancing the health of individuals and their communities”

The applications of Telemedicine:

1. To extend affordable quality healthcare services to those places where these are not available due to basic healthcare infrastructure and delivery issues.

2. Electronic transmission of clinical information of both synchronous and asynchronous types, involving voice and data transfer of patients to distantly located experts and get their treatment advice, online.

3. To effectively train the medics and the paramedics located in distant places and proper management of healthcare delivery/service systems.

4. Disaster management.

The Process:

The process can be:

- ‘Real time’ or synchronous when through a telecommunication link real time interaction between the patients and doctors/experts can take place. This technology can be used even for tele-robotic surgery.

- ‘Non-real time’ or asynchronous type, which involves transmission of stored diagnostics/medical data and other details of the patients to the specialists for assessing off-line and advice them at a time of convenience of the specialists.

These processes facilitate access to specialists’ healthcare services by the rural patients and the rural medical practitioners reducing avoidable travel time and related expenses. At the same time such interaction helps upgrading the knowledge of the rural medical practitioners and paramedics.

Relevance of Telemedicine in India:

Telemedicine is very relevant to India as it faces a scarcity of both hospitals and medical specialists. In India for every 10,000 of the population just 0.6 doctor is available. According to the Planning Commission, India is short of 600,000 doctors, 10 lakh nurses and 200,000 dental surgeons. Over 72 percent of Indians live in rural areas where facilities of healthcare are still grossly inadequate. Most of the specialists are reluctant to go to the rural areas. In addition, 80 percent of doctors, 75 percent of dispensaries and 60 percent of hospitals, are situated in urban India.

Telemedicine can bridge the healthcare divide:

Equitable access to healthcare is the overriding goal of the National Health Policy 2002. Telemedicine has a great potential to ensure that the inequities in the access to healthcare services are adequately addressed by the country.

The market of Telemedicine in India:

Frost & Sullivan has estimated the telemedicine market of India at US$3.4 million, which is expected to record a CAGR of over 21 percent between 2007 and 2014.

Practice of Telemedicine in India:

Not only the central government of India, many state governments and private players are also entering into telemedicine in a big way with the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) playing a pivotal role.

Telemedicine now shows an immense potential, within the frugal healthcare infrastructure of India, to catapult rural healthcare services, especially secondary and tertiary, to a different level altogether. Current data indicate that over 278 hospitals in India have already been provided with telemedicine facilities. 235 small hospitals including those in rural areas are now connected to 43 specialty hospitals. ISRO provides the hospitals with telemedicine systems including software, hardware, communication equipment and even satellite bandwidth.

In 1999, India based one of the largest healthcare providers in Asia, The Apollo Hospitals Group also entered into telemedicine space. Today, the group has quite successfully established over 115 telemedicine locations in India, It has been reported that a tele-consultation between the experts and the rural centre ranges from 15 to 30 minutes in these facilities.

The state governments and private hospitals are now required to allocate funds to further develop and improve penetration of Telemedicine facilities in India.

Issues with Telemedicine in India:

Telemedicine is not free from various complicated legal, social, technical and consumer related issues, which need to be addressed urgently.

- Many a time, doctors feel that for Telemedicine they need to work extra hours without commensurate monetary compensation, as per their expectations.

- The myth created that setting up and running a Telemedicine facility is expensive needs to be broken, as all these costs can be easily recovered by any hospital through nominal charges to the patients.

- Inadequate and uninterrupted availability of power supply could limit proper functioning of a telemedicine centre.

- High quality of Telemedicine related voice and data transfer is of utmost importance. Any compromise in this area may have significant impact on the treatment outcome of a patient.

- Lack of trained manpower for Telemedicine can be addressed by making it a part of regular medical college curriculum.

- Legal implications, if arise, out of any Telemedicine treatment need to be clearly articulated.

- A system needs to be worked out to prevent any possible misuse or abuse of the confidential Telemedicine treatment data of a patient.

- Reimbursement procedure of Telemedicine treatment costs by the medical insurance companies needs to be effectively addressed.

Conclusion:

Some significant and path breaking advances have indeed been made in the field of Telemedicine in India. It is unfortunate that not enough awareness has been created, as yet, on this novel technology based healthcare service for the common man. The pioneering role of ISRO in this field is also not known to many. It appears that advances of Telemedicine in India to extend quality healthcare services, especially, to our rural folks will continue to remain unsung for some more time. Until of course our all powerful ‘Fourth Estate’ steps in to initiate a healthy discussion on this subject within the civil society.

By Tapan Ray

Disclaimer: The views/opinions expressed in this article are entirely my own, written in my individual and personal capacity. I do not represent any other person or organization for this opinion.

Healthcare services in India … growing disparity between urban and rural population – can ‘Telemedicine’ play a significant role?

Healthcare Industry in India is currently valued at US$ 35 billion. This industry is expected to record a turnover of US$ 75 billion in 2012 and US$ 150 billion in 2017, reports Technopak Advisors in their report titled “India Healthcare Trends 2008”.Growing Middle Class Population – the key growth driver:This growth is not expected to come from rural India where over 70% of Indian population lives and a vast majority of them do not have ‘access to modern medicines‘. The key driver of growth of this sector will be growing 150 million strong middle class population with increasing health awareness. Out of this population, 50 million have a disposable income of US$ 4,380 – US$21, 890,, reports McKinsey. Technopak Advisors report recommends an immediate investment of US$ 82 billion to meet this growing demand.

Medical Tourism - another potential growth driver:

Another growth driver is expected to be ‘Medical Tourism’. With a slogan: ‘First World Treatment at Third World Prices’, Medical Tourism is expected to become a US$ 2 billion industry by 2012 from US$ 350 million in 2006, reports a study done by McKinsey and CII. In 2008-09, over 200,000 foreigners, mainly from Middle East and South Asian countries came for medical treatment in India. Hospitals in India are now trying to attract patients from Afro-Asian countries who spend around US$ 20 billion outside their respective countries, towards medical treatment. Thus, the current number of patients visiting India for medical tourism is expected to grow by around 25 percent during next few years.

Medical expertise and facilities – a sharp contrast between the urban and rural India:

India Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF) reports that over a period of last few years besides cost advantage, high success rate, especially in the following areas has been attracting the medical tourists towards India:

• Over 500,000 major surgeries and over a million other surgical procedures including cardio-thoracic, neurological and cancer surgeries have been performed by the Indian specialists, with success rates at par with international standards.

• The success rate of cardiac bypass in India is 98.7 per cent against 97.5 per cent in the U.S.

• India’s success in 110 bone marrow transplants is 80 per cent.

• The success rate in 6,000 renal transplants is 95 per cent.

• India has the 2nd highest number of qualified doctors in the world.

It is worth noting, the centre of excellence of all these outstanding statistical records are located mainly in the urban areas. In sharp contrast to these most of the rural populations are denied of basic healthcare facilities services. Despite being second highest growing economy in the world after China and having world class healthcare facilities available in the country, a vast majority of rural population is denied of basic healthcare services. Even in those places where primary healthcare establishments are available, poor maintenance, understaffing, non-availability of medicines and antic medical equipment, deny the basic and standard healthcare services to the local population.

India is still the home for world’s ‘largest number of poor people in a single country’, even after 61 years of Independence. A study indicates that in India around 260 million people live below the poverty line (BPL). Out of this number about 193 million people live in rural areas and about 67 million live in urban areas. Over 75% of these poor people live in rural India.

The point to note here, although over 700 million people live in rural India, only 193 million of them belong to BPL families. Therefore, even those who can afford proper medical treatment in rural areas, do not have access to modern healthcare facilities, due lack of healthcare infrastructure and services.

Quoting Oxford University of the United Kingdom (UK), The Economic Times (ET) dated February 2, 2009 reported that due to lack of basic healthcare facilities, around one million women and children die every year in India. This is, once again, mainly because 700 million people in rural India have no access to specialists. 80% of medical specialists live in urban areas. ‘India Knowledge, Wharton’ reported recently that India would require an investment of US$ 20 billion over next 5 years to address this problem.

National Health Policy 1983 promised healthcare services to all by 2000 – has it delivered?

The National Health Policy 1983 announced commitment of the Government of India to provide ‘health care services to all by year 2000′. Unfortunately, even today only 35% of Indian population have access to affordable modern medicines, despite an appreciable growth of this sector during last four decades.

Per capita expenditure towards healthcare in India is one of lowest among Asian countries outside South Asia. The expenditure of the Government for healthcare has progressively grown over the years though, healthcare expenditure as a percentage of total government spending has decreased considerably. Only silver lining is that the private sector spending towards healthcare is steadily increasing at a much higher pace.

Can ‘Telemedicine’ improve access to healthcare in rural India?

Would creation of a cost-effective ‘Telemedicine’ infrastructure in rural areas be able to address this problem? In my view, this area is worth exploring seriously and should be tried out by the Government with Public Private Partnership (PPP) model, initially with pilot projects.

‘Telemedicine’ has been defined as the use of electronic information and communication technologies to provide health care support to patients from distant locations. Thus ‘Telemedicine’ could be used to provide healthcare services where it does not exist at all and at the same will help to improve healthcare services considerably, where something already exists.

With the advancement in telecommunication and satellite communication technology in the recent years, the scope of creating and gradually expanding the ‘Telemedicine’ facilities in India indeed throw open a new avenue to improve ‘access to quality healthcare services’, in rural India.

Besides lack of basic primary healthcare services in rural areas where over 70% of Indian population live, 90% of secondary and tertiary healthcare facilities are also located in large cities and towns.

Thus, in addition to primary healthcare services, even secondary and tertiary healthcare needs of a large number of rural populations can be successfully met locally through consultations with the experts located in distant cities and towns without anyone having to travel to those far off cities and towns.

Telemedicine‘, therefore, could also offer solutions to the problem of expert medical assistance during serious or critical illness of people living in rural India. The role of ‘Telemedicine’ on healthcare services will be very meaningful under such circumstances.

‘Telemedicine’ services have already started in a smaller scale though, in Kerala, West Bengal and North-eastern states of India. It is slowly coming up in some other southern states, as well. What is required now is a concerted and integrated approach, spear-headed by the Government of India, taking all State Governments on board, with a robust policy initiative.

However, there are some key concerns with this initiative, as well. The most important of which is related to costs of such treatment for the rural households, besides other regulatory issues.

Appropriate regulatory and policy frameworks should be thoughtfully worked out to extend such innovative services to rural India, under PPP. If the concept of ‘Telemedicine’ can be made to work effectively in rural areas, leveraging world class expertise in information technology available within the country, India will emerge as a role model in the field of ‘Telemedicine’ for the developing nations of the world.

Moreover, over a period of time the ‘Telemedicine’ platform can also be effectively utilized for many other healthcare initiatives, like for example, disease prevention programs, medical/para medical staff training etc.

When ‘e-chaupal’ initiative of ITC for rural farmers of India could be so successful, why not ‘Telemedicine’ for rural patients of India?

The promise of “Healthcare services to all by year 2000” as enunciated in the National Health Policy, 1983 of the Government of India, could still be achievable, albeit late, by the next decade of this new millennium with ‘Telemedicine’.

By Tapan Ray

Disclaimer: The views/opinions expressed in this article are entirely my own, written in my individual and personal capacity. I do not represent any other person or organization for this opinion.