Dr. Devi Prasad Shetty (MS, FRCS
Transcription
Dr. Devi Prasad Shetty (MS, FRCS
Heart Surgery for $800 Dr. Devi Prasad Shetty (MS, FRCS-England) Chairman Narayana Hrudayalaya Group Of Hospitals, India 1 In a span of just 10 years, NH has expanded its operations to 11 cities comprising 14 hospitals with 5000 beds Jaipur Ahmedabad Kolkata Jamshedpur Raipur Hyderabad Dharwad Kolar Shimoga Bangalore Mysore 2 NH Cardiac MSCC Sparsh Nethralaya MSRNH CNH Whitefield Economy of the 21st century will be driven by the health care industry. 3 Job creation for economic growth and social stability. •Jobs for extremely skilled, semi-skilled, and unskilled. •Healthcare and wellness industry is 4.5 Trillion dollars. •US health sector: $ 2.5 trillion. •IT> Health sector. •NHS: England's largest employer. 4 • 75% of the fortune, 50 companies are in health care, directly or indirectly. 5 India will become the first country in the world to disassociate health care from affluence. 6 • We produce the largest number of doctors in the world. • We produce the largest number of nurses and med technicians in the world. • Outside the USA we have the largest number of US FDA approved drug manufacturing units. 7 Of course by default! 8 • Indians are genetically 3 times more vulnerable for heart disease than Europeans. • Younger age. • We produce 28 million babies a year. • We produce about 600 to 800 children a day with the heart disease. • India need 2.5 million heart surgeries a year. 9 India does only about 90,000 a year 10 100 years after the first heart surgery less than 10% of the world’s population can afford it. 11 Global crisis in health care • Tax payers’ money can't pay for it any more. 12 Yeshaswini Micro Health Insurance Poor people in isolation are weak, but together are strong 1.7 million farmers, members of co-op societies 11 cents per month Government as a reinsurer Yeshaswini trust manages the scheme 13 How is it viable with 11 cents??? • Only 0.8% of the random population needs surgeries. • No fraud - nobody wants surgery even if it is free. • Pays only for the surgeries (1650 varieties). • No administrative costs. • 400 network hospitals with under-utilized OT. • Medical treatment at discount. 14 Governments will become health insurance providers • Rajeev Arogyasree of Andhrapradesh. • Kalignar insurance of Tamilnadu. • Vajapayee Arogyasree of Karnataka. 15 Politicians across the world do the right things for the wrong reasons. 16 750 million Indians pay about Rs 150 / month just to speak on the mobile phone. 17 • World doesn't need another magic pill, fastest scanner or new operation. • World needs a mechanism to deliver what's already developed to 90% of the deprived population. 18 Narayana Hrudayalaya Health City 19 20 21 Why 5000 bed health cities • More surgeries, better results, quick discharges. • More you buy, less you pay. • Number attracts the talent, and patients. • Fixed costs get distributed. • Academic activity builds the succession plan. 22 Telemedicine with ISRO 53000 patients have had tele-consultations free of cost 23 24 300 bed low cost heart hospital for $6 million,6 months by L&T Only way to reach 30000 beds 25 Dialysis for $ 10 26 Daily P&L statement 27 Charity is not scalable. 28 Also largest employer of WOMEN. 29 30 We fly a 30 year old plane and junk a 7 year old CT scanner. 31 Problem is not money, it's manpower • India is short of at least 1 million doctors, 2 million nurses • WHO estimates global shortage of 4 million health workers. • Acute shortage of specialists. US>India • Nephrologists. 32 Why India has high MMR, IMR • We produce 28 million babies a year. • India runs a MBBS DOCTOR centric health care. 33 Crisis in nursing • India is short of at least 2 million nurses. • Admission to nursing schools have come down by 50% in India. • Nursing is a dead end job with no opportunity for carrier progression in India. • Nurses are not empowered even to give an injection. 34 Global Trends in Supply and Demand U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS TABLE 2. FASTEST GROWING OCCUPATIONS, 2004-14 1 31-1011 Home health aides 2 15-1081 Network systems and data communications analysts 3 31-9092 Medical assistants 4 29-1071 Physician assistants 5 15-1031 Computer software engineers, applications 6 31-2021 Physical therapist assistants 7 29-2021 Dental hygienists 8 15-1032 Computer software engineers, systems software 9 31-9091 Dental assistants 10 39-9021 Personal and home care aides 11 15-1071 Network and computer systems administrators 12 15-1061 Database administrators 13 29-1123 Physical therapists 14 19-4092 Forensic science technicians 15 29-2056 Veterinary technologists and technicians 16 29-2032 Diagnostic medical sonographers 17 31-2022 Physical therapist aides 18 31-2011 Occupational therapist assistants 19 19-1042 Medical scientists, except epidemiologists 20 29-1122 Occupational therapists 15 of the 20 fastest growing occupations in the USA are in Health Care 35 It's the insecurities of professional bodies which perpetuates shortages 36 37 India needs 500 new medical schools • If India adds 100 new medical schools a year for the next 5 yrs we will adequate number of doctors by 2025. • It costs about $40 million to build one medical school. • Medical education is very expensive. 38 Why is it so expensive to build a medical school in India ? • Existing large hospitals cannot become teaching institutes. • A new campus to be created on 25 acres of land with hospital, academic block, hostel, auditorium, playground built according to specifications. • Only not-for-profits can run educational institutions. • Teacher retirement age of 60, no part-time teachers recognised. • Archaic curricula requires 250 teachers for 100 students while GMC requires 40 teachers. 39 Global university for medical, nursing and paramedical education • Global university to conduct training program across Asia, Africa, middle east and Latin America. • Best syllabus from leading universities of USA and Europe. • Conducts entrance and exit tests. • Accredits best hospitals across the world for training and periodically monitors the standards. • Degree recognised globally. 40 Cost of health care will not get reduced in US and Europe unless Asia and Africa become a health care market. 41 Why are mobile phones so cheap in USA and Europe? 42 750 million Indians keep buying mobile phones 43 Intent and policy mismatch • Government spends 1% of GDP on Healthcare. • 80% of the national expenditure on health is borne out of pocket. • 47% of the rural, 37% of the urban population borrow money or sell assets to pay for health care. • Health care costs are the most common cause of rural indebtedness. • Shortage of 3 million beds. •No standard PPP. 44 45 Harvard Business School “Cardiac Care for the Poor” 46 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL - THE HENRY FORD OF HEART SURGERY 47 Knowledge @ Wharton “Narayana Hrudayalaya: A Model for Accessible, Affordable Health Care?” “Patients at his hospital get cardiac care at a cost lower than any other hospital in the country and at a fraction of what it would cost elsewhere in the world, a feat accomplished through what Shetty refers to as "process innovation."” http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/india/article.cfm?a rticleid=4493# 48 Forbes “The World’s Largest Heart Factory” “Devi Shetty's doctors perform the most heart surgeries in India. He is using that scale to cut the cost of treatment.” http://business.in.com/article/beyond-business/the-worldslargest-heart-factory/1442/1 49 The Guardian, U.K. “Indian heart surgeon and public health activist Dr Devi Shetty's Bangalore-based Narayana Hrudayalaya hospital performs more heart operations a day than Singapore and Malaysia together. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/mar/31/indiahealth 50 BBC News “Production Line Heart Surgery” “A simple business plan, but potentially quite revolutionary. Could this be a vision of the future for health care, in Britain and around the world?” http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-10837726 51 NH: Selected recognition Television media The Discovery channel & the Australian Broadcasting Corporation have made documentaries on Narayana Hrudayalaya, which have been broadcasted all over the world http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4r9R8B-p1Ok http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsPic6PRCf4 - Discovery Channel - Australian Broadcasting Corporation Articles, Case Studies & Books Forbes Asia Harvard Business School Reader’s Digest News Scientist 52 NCUMC Artist’s impression Thank you 53 By 2020 India becomes a Superpower But this will still 54be our customer