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Funding Opportunities in Health Care Emerging Trends and Road Ahead. Mr. Sunil Sachdeva Co-founder, Medanta, The Medicity July 21, 2014, Hotel Taj Gateway, Kolkata. India has $65B Healthcare Market which is expected to grow at 15% p.a ; Within Healthcare, Delivery is the biggest segment.
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Funding Opportunities in Health Care Emerging Trends and Road Ahead Mr. Sunil Sachdeva Co-founder, Medanta, The Medicity July 21, 2014, Hotel Taj Gateway, Kolkata
India has $65B Healthcare Market which is expected to grow at 15% p.a; Within Healthcare, Delivery is the biggest segment
8_84 7_84 6_84 Availability, Affordability, Quality and Physical access are crucial for efficient healthcare delivery Affordability Dimensions of Healthcare access Physical Access Quality Availability /Capacity Source: IMS health, June 2013
Availability and access to quality doctors remains one of the biggest concerns for India Healthcare Facilities concentrated in uRban areas Available doctors & nurses are ~50% of required “If shortage of doctors is one problem, their unwillingness to work in the rural hinterland is another, creating artificial scarcity in the area and high concentration in another” Union Health Ministry “It is alarming to note that doctor patient ratio in rural India is 1:20,000 as against the urban ratio of 1:2000 which itself is far below the WHO requirement of 1:250 in rural India ” ONICRA, 2013
Disparities exist even at a regional level Source: PwC report, 2013
Poor quality and inadequate number of PHC’s make Primary Health Care a challenge 2_85 Shortfall of ~17K PHC’s and ~2.6 M health workers nationwide; 41% of PHCs lack healthcare personnel • ~26K government-run primary health care centers and 615 district-level hospitals • Poor quality of delivery at these institution,; highly underutilized • ~200K privately-owned general physician clinics • No standardization in terms of processes, quality and service levels • Patients end up going to large tertiary care hospitals even for basic health care needs • more expensive and not easily accessible
Physical Access to quality healthcare • Lack of Primary Health centers • Unavailability of doctors in Rural Areas • Regional disparities CHALLENGE • Infrastructure takes time and money • Artificial constraints – good doctors don’t want to go to rural areas INNOVATION CONSTRAINTS
M HEALTH 1 Source: PwC report, 2013
7_85 M HEALTH 1 India receptive to adopting Mhealth Currently, MOST # of live projects in india • Mobile penetration on the rise • Developing economies more receptive to change • Offers solutions to the core problems – Availability and Physical Access Source: PwC report, 2013
8_85 10_85 HEALTH CARE UNITS IN TIER 2 AND TIER 3 CITIES 2 Huge demand makes it a lucrative opportunity Big as well new hospital venturing into small cities • Cost of setting up of infrastructure is low • Demand is high as income level of people residing in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities on a rise • Government offering incentives • Big hospitals like Medanta, Fortis, Apollo and Manipal • Independent hospital chains like Vaatsalaya , Glocal • 50- 100 bed hospitals in tier 2 and tier 3 cities • >$15M raised from VC and PE funds
7_84 PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP FOR SETTING SUPER SPECIALITY HOSPITALS 3 • Alone cannot best solve the problem of Health Care • Potential benefits include better quality , more resources – funds, technology, increased access etc • Models • Operations and management contracts • BOT through SPV for private financing • DBFO - Design, build, finance and operate – variation of BOT • Lease: Private sector provides own health care and risks. • Concessions: Government regulates price and quality. Private sector invests, pays for concession rights. • Government contributes to reduce commercial risk. • Joint ownership. Sharing revenues, expenses and assets. Technological expertise through private sector.
SO WHERE DOES THE FUNDING OPPORTUNITY LIE? CHALLENGE OPPORTUNITY INNOVATION FUNDING OPPORTUNITY