This document discusses opportunities and challenges in healthcare IT in India. It notes that India faces severe shortages in healthcare infrastructure like hospital beds and doctors. Healthcare IT can help address these issues by facilitating telemedicine, mobile health apps, and implementing health information management systems. However, adoption of healthcare IT in India faces challenges like lack of infrastructure, trained professionals, and interoperability between systems. The document recommends measures like developing policies, increasing funding, training professionals, and ensuring systems support regional languages to successfully implement healthcare IT in India.
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3. Indian Healthcare : A Snapshot
2.9
2.6
0.7
US China India
Hospital Beds/1000 Population Ratio
(2013)
3.31
1.53
0.592
US China India
Doctors/1000 Population Ratio
(2013)
Source: EIU
There is only one doctor per 1,700 citizens in India
India would additionally need about 4 Lakh doctors by 2020
There is a severe shortage of hospital beds and medical
facilities
Approximately 1 Million Indians die every year due to
inadequate healthcare facilities
Nearly 700 Million people have no access to specialist care
4. The Indian government spends a trivial 4% of GDP on healthcare
Government spends a meager 33%
In comparison US and China, spend nearly 46% and 56%, respectively
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
US
China
India
CAGR of Healthcare Spending Per Capita (2009-2014)
Source: EIU
3.78%
17.07%
7.57%
Healthcare Spending Per Capita (US$)
9559
373
78.2
2013
US
China
India
8. Healthcare Information Technology (HIT)
HIT - Holistic management of health information
across computerized systems and its secure exchange
between consumers, providers, government and
quality entities and insurers
Digitization of Patient health records
Reaching remote parts of country -Telemedicine
Advanced patient monitoring and tracking
Address scarcity of doctors and hospital beds issue
Knowledge management - vaccination, hygiene maintenance,
healthy lifestyle, etc., could be spread easily
10. Health Information Management System (HIMS)
HIMS automates it all
Enables Patient/Vendor accounting (insurance
or other claims) and smoothens the whole
process
Saves a lot of space in physical terms
Patient’s data/test records are accessible at any
point of time, anywhere
Patient’s movements could be tracked with
data centralization
HIMS
11. Implementation of HIMS in India
In order to understand the penetration level of HIMS in
India, RNCOS research team interviewed IT
Head/Administrative Officers of various public and private
hospitals PAN India
Sample size for the research was approximately 200
public/private hospitals
Basic Level (for general patient
registration and billing process)
Moderate Level (up to LIS &
PACs level)
Advanced Level (up to e-
Prescription and CDSS level)
Source: RNCOS
12. Telemedicine
Telemedicine is the utilization of medical
information exchanged from one site to
another, via electronic communication tools for
improving a patient’s clinical health status
Unwillingness of doctors to work in the rural
areas
Large number of patients in rural India travel
to cities
Facilitating
Accessibility &
Affordability
Providing
treatment at
Par with
Metropolitans
Overcoming the
Scarcity of
Paramedics &
Hospital Beds
13. National Telemedicine
Projects
• Provides eye care specialty services to the patients of rural and remote areas through
tele-ophthalmology mobile vans covering Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal
Tele-ophthalmology
Project
• 4 Regional Workshops for NRTN are planned in 4 different regions of the country to
educate the state functionaries and finalize the state project proposals
National Rural
Telemedicine
Network (NRTN)
• 27 Regional Cancer Centers will be linked with 100 peripheral centers for primary
prevention, early detection, treatment and rehabilitation of cancer patients
National OncoNET
Project
• Plans to establish a national grid on telemedicine for networking of medical collegesNational Medical
College Network
14. ISRO Telemedicine Projects
DIT Telemedicine Projects
ISRO & DIT Telemedicine Projects
Telemedicine: ISRO & DIT Projects
ISRO established a
Telemedicine Network
consisting of 382 Hospitals
DIT established more than
100 nodes all over India
Besides these, other ISRO &
DIT Projects are:
• Village Resource Center
(VRCs)
• Common Service Center
(100,000 nodes)
• E-PanchayatSource: RNCOS
15. M-Health
Smartphone shipments grew by 167% in 2013
M-health - Delivery of healthcare
services/information via mobile phones
Clinical data immediately viewable
throughout hospital on mobile and
desktop devices
16. Bridging the gap between the existing and required
healthcare services
Services such as telephone-based appointment scheduling
and prescription refilling
Improving the healthcare access for the vast underserved rural areas and enhances patient care for
urban consumers
Consultations using mobile or 3G based video
conferencing providing quality care - just a click away
Provides options of performing basic tests like glucose monitoring, BP/heart beat monitoring, urine
analysis etc. at home
M-Health - Changing Healthcare Paradigm
17.
18. • Launched in 2009
• Over 10.5 Crore pregnant women and children have
been registered in MCTS
• System sends reminders to the Auxiliary Nursing
Midwives (ANMs) or Accredited Social Health Activist
(ASHAs) on the various treatments
• Once a mother receives her immunization, ANMs
send information to the system via SMS
• Ensures timely delivery and tracking of mother and
child health.
Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS)
19. Integrated Disease Surveillance
Program (IDSP)
• Launched in 2004
• To detect and respond to disease outbreaks
• At present, over 90% districts report such weekly data
through e-mail/portal
• On an average, 30-40 outbreaks are reported every week by
all the States
• Over 1500 outbreaks in 2012, over 1900 outbreaks were
reported in 2013
20. • Launched in 2012
• More than 3.5 Lakh patients already registered
• It keeps track of TB patients across the country
and ensure timely delivery of medication
• An SMS is sent to patient with registration ID and
details of DOTS Operator
• SMS reminder is sent for taking regular medicine
• Daily SMS is sent to all monitoring authorities
Nikshay for TB
21. National Health Portal
• The NHP was launched in late 2013
• Aims to serve as a repository of medical
history of 1 Billion Indians
• Works as a single point access for
authenticated health information for
citizens, students, healthcare
professionals and researchers
• Promotes reliable, high quality health
information among the population to
decrease the risk of hospitalization or
disease burden
22. Despite India being an IT-enabled services’
giant, the use of HIT is limited
0.875
1.08
1.27 1.43
1.65
1.92
2013E 2014e 2015f 2016f 2017f 2018f
Healthcare IT Spending in India
(Billion US$), 2013-2018
Source: Gartner, RNCOS
Note: E = Gartner Estimation, e/f = RNCOS Estimation
23. HIT Adoption Challenges in India
Scarcity of trained
manpower
Insufficient
fund allocation
Multilingualism
Interoperability at
state/national level
Scalability
Low awareness
Lack of Proper
Infrastructure
25. Availability in regional languages
Provide Quality Training
Increased funding for infrastructural developments
Creation of Data Repositories
Linking of EMRs with PAN or Unique ID
Creating HIT policies for effective implementation
Better Knowledge Management
27. Nanotechnology is the manipulation of matter on an
atomic, molecular and supramolecular scale
Nanotechnology
Application at DNA analysis/diagnostics level
Faster and accurate diagnosis with minimal sample size
Accurate targeting of the drug using nanoparticles
28. 3D PRINTING
3D printing or additive manufacturing (AM) is a
process of making a three-dimensional solid object
of virtually any shape from a digital model
3-D printing saves time over casting handmade inner ear mould
Scientists are able to print the artificial meat tissue suitable for eating
In future, printing functional human tissues will also be a revolution
surgeons can design knees specific to each patient
30. Awareness about importance of HIT through Seminars and Conferences
Policy framework required for HIT implementation
Realist deadline of upto 10 years for complete implementation
Post grace period institutions/doctors should be penalised
Doctors/Hospitals should be encouraged to use HIT
Policy need to be defined for interoperability
Healthcare information should be available in regional languages
IT industry must work closely with doctors to develop user friendly applications
31.
32. Shushmul Maheshwari
Chief Executive Officer
RNCOS
E mail: shushmul@rncos.com
Phone: +91 120 4224700 /01 / 02/ 03
Mobile:+91 9891048088
Website: www.rncos.com
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