udupi’s of healthcare

1
or the rich, famous and pregnant living in Hyderabad’s upmarket Jubilee Hills, there is The Cradle, a high-end, luxury ‘birthing centre’ recently launched by Apollo Hospi- tals. It’s a relatively new idea, at the top end of India’s booming private healthcare business. But the bigger innovations are happening at the other end of the economic spec- trum, closer to the bottom of the pyramid. One such is unfolding at LifeSpring Hospitals in Chilkalgu- da, Secunderabad, less than an hour’s drive from Jubilee Hills. Many of the city’s poor live in Chilkalguda. When their women go into labour, some head to Life- Spring. It is clean, airy and well- staffed. Its rates for maternal deliv- eries and surgeries such as hys- terectomies are displayed promi- nently on a board outside the gener- al ward. Normal deliveries cost `4,000, a fraction of what other pri- vate hospitals would charge. For poor patients, the rates are as much a source of comfort as the treat- ment itself. Inside the ward, each bed is sepa- rated by a pink curtain and there is a separate cot for a caregiver. The environment is frugal, functional and affordable. “All our hospitals are close to urban slums and the working poor,” says Anant Kumar, CEO of the maternity hospital chain which runs nine centres in Andhra Pradesh, including in Rajah- mundry, Vijaywada and Nellore. “Our customers will not travel more than 2 to 5 kilometres for delivery.” Cut to Rewari, a town of one lakh people in Haryana, 82 km south- west of Delhi. Known for its brass products and close to the industrial hub of Manesar, Rewari is not exactly the boondocks. Yet, last year when resident Jagannath Bathla, 73, needed cataract surgery for his right eye, it felt like one. Bathla would have to travel 50 km by road one way to the town of Mahendragarh for something city- dwellers would get in the neigh- bourhood. Then he heard of Eye-Q, a new eye hospital right in the heart of Rewari. In September last year, he got his right eye operated there and was back for the left earlier this month. “It’s just five minutes to the hospital,” he says. Eye-Q is targeting smaller cities because people end up wasting time and money, and foregoing income to travel for care, says Rajat Goel, founder CEO who teamed up with eye surgeon Ajay Sharma to start the company in 2007. EyeQ runs 10 hospitals in places such as Hald- wani and Sahranpur in northern India where it charges 30% less for surgeries than its super-speciality hub in Gurgaon. “It is providing a Gurgaon facility at Rewari prices,” says Vishal Vasishth, founder MD of Song Investment Advisors, which invested an undisclosed amount in Eye Q in 2010. TIGHT COST CONTROLS For the better part of the last decade, a small but growing number of entrepreneurs have been invest- ing their energies and resources to answer a question that mostly engages only policy makers and charities — how do you make quali- ty healthcare affordable, accessible and ubiquitous? “Initially, the approach was build and people will come,’” says Ashwin Naik, CEO and co-founder of Ban- galore-based Vaatsalya, which ven- tured into semi-urban areas of Kar- nataka with its brand of multi-spe- ciality hospitals in 2005. It now has 10 such centres. “But over time the industry realised that one shop doesn’t work for everybody.” Affordable healthcare is not entire- ly new to the private sector. Deviprasad Shetty’s heart hospital Narayana Hrudayalaya and charita- ble eye hospitals Sankara Nethralaya and LV Prasad offer high-quality, affordable care. But they are exceptions, present only in cities. “Momentum has just come into affordable healthcare,” says Abhishek Singh, head (healthcare) at Crisil Risk & Infrastructure Advi- sory. “Even the lower middle class has been getting conscious about quality but did not have options at a reasonable cost.” LifeSpring and Vaatsalya have been early movers and their growth has emboldened others, including investors. “The biggest learning from Vaat- salya is that this model is worth- while and scaleable,” says Vineet Rai, founder CEO of venture capital firm Aavishkaar, an investor in the company. Last year, Rai’s venture fund put an undisclosed amount into New Delhi’s GV Meditech to help it expand beyond one hub hos- pital in Benares into several spoke hospitals — smaller than the hub and with limited specialties — and micro clinics in villages and towns of Uttar Pradesh. Meditech’s founder MD, gynaecologist Indu Singh, had been mulling over this. But Aavishkaar “possibly strength- ened her conviction by telling her we had done it before,” says Rai. Similarly, in 2010, Kolkata-based start-up Glocal Healthcare raised `15 crore from Sequoia Capital, and Elevar Equity to set up eight rural hospitals in a year. It has ambitions of doing 2,000 such hospitals over seven years. The first one will be ready this June, says CEO Sabahat Azim. Make no mistake. Low cost does not mean cutting corners. Rather, it is “about providing quality without the corresponding price increases or at lower cost,” says Meghna Rao, country director, Acumen Fund, which invested `5 crore in LifeSpring in 2008. Doctors are paid competitively; there is investment in training of auxiliary staff; there are hospital information technology systems to keep track of patients and clinical outcomes; patient feedback is also actively sought. These companies are high-quali- ty, replicable, and scaleable just like the large chains, but with some key differences. The aim is to have hospitals that are accessible and efficient, run with a tight control on cost, and a firm grip on pricing. “It demands tremendous manage- ment since they have to work on a tight budget,” says Muralidharan Nair, partner (healthcare), Ernst & Young. They are much like the Udipi hotels known for inexpensive quality fare. SHARED RESOURCES Hospitals have always been high- cost, high-gestation projects. It costs `80 lakh to `1 crore per bed to set up a tertiary care hospital in a big city. Such hospitals focus on big-ticket surgeries such as heart or cancer. But these entrepreneurs focus on low-value but high-frequency serv- ices, whether it is child birth, gall bladder surgery, eye care or kidney dialysis. This helps them cut set-up costs and use volumes to drive oper- ational costs lower. “We have found that 95% of the health need in rural areas is secondary care,” says Azim. “India needs more models in pri- mary and secondary care,” says Vishal Bali, CEO, Fortis Global. They build small hospitals. Each LifeSpring centre has 20-25 beds, Vaatsalaya has 70-100. Vaatsalya also does not invest in specialised tools such as CT scanners that cost crores if they are available locally. It chooses to refer patients there. “We have made it clear that we are in the business of appropriate tech- nology and not latest technology,” says Naik. There’s another reason for this prudence. “Conventionally, every hospital puts in everything into the system and then the doctor gets a commission on every procedure performed which is an incentive for unnecessary investigation,” says Azim of Glocal. Eye-Q’s network shares both doc- tors and equipment. For instance, retina equipment is expensive but not used as frequently as a ‘phaco’ or cataract machine. So a retina specialist travels once a week to four centres from the hub with the equipment in the back of a car or by train. These centres have pooled patients in advance. This sharing has helped cut the cost of a centre from the ini- tially estimated `2.5 crore to `90 lakh. This also helps maintain con- sistency of service quality, says Deependra Vikram Singh, a retina specialist at Eye-Q who travels every week to Rewari, among other towns. “Because specialists are moving across, they can observe any defi- ciencies (in the smaller hospitals) to help improve and ensure that quali- ty of eye-care becomes uniform.” “We reduce cost not by providing less, but providing more, more effi- ciently,” says Glocal’s Azim. “At `9,000 for a C-section we get the same target profit margin as a private hos- pital gets charging `20,000 because our costs are low,” says LifeSpring’s Kumar. Such low-cost chains could break even in 6-18 months. THE HARD ROAD In 2009, when Vaatsalya first approached Manjunath Doshetty, a kidney specialist, working in Ban- galore’s reputed Manipal Hospital, he hadn’t heard of them. But Vaat- salya, it appeared, had researched him thoroughly. They knew that Doshetty was a native of Gulbarga in North Karnataka where they were planning to start their newest hospital. Doshetty admits that the absence of infrastructure and staff to practise his discipline in his hometown had forced him to move to Bangalore. Dialysis required equipment, qualified nursing staff and an intensive care unit with trained paramedics. There was all of one in Gulbarga, and it wasn’t up to speed. Vaatsalya was promising to change that. Doshetty knew there was demand — many of his patients travelled all the way from Gulbarga to Banga- lore some 600 km away. Others were travelling 100 km to Sholapur. A chat with doctors in other Vaatsalya hospitals convinced him and he has- n’t looked back. “We are growing to be a good family now,” he says. Vat- salya has hired 20 such consultants from cities, native to Gulbarga, and moved them to its hospital, he adds. This is tougher in some areas. In Uttar Pradesh, “there is a paucity of many trained doctors who are will- ing to work in slightly more remote areas,” says Rai. Meditech has struggled to find doctors for its ‘spoke’ hospital in Ghazipur, a two- hour drive away. Currently, a gynae- cologist, a cardiologist, an orthopaedic surgeon, and an eye surgeon travel once a week or fort- nightly from the hub to the spoke. “Initially the doctors did not want to travel,” admits founder Singh, but with her persistence and with the locals fussing over them, the doctors have come around. The company has also firmed up a satellite link with ISRO which will help provide remote care. Others such as EyeQ partner with senior doctors who already have a local nursing home but none to bequeath it to. EyeQ takes over their practice, upgrades it and puts them in charge. An important carrot, says Azim of Glocal, is the absence of pressure to justify the hospital’s capital investment by advising unnecessary tests, or procedures. This is echoed by the other hospitals. “We have no targets and we don’t ask them to do unnecessary hysterectomies,” says LifeSpring’s Kumar. (Andhra Pradesh is known for such practices). MILES TO GO Soon, it will be time for these low- cost entrepreneurs to expand, for which they will need capital. Initial- ly, only social investors — those who do not measure returns in financial terms alone — backed them. The Acumen Fund that has invested in LifeSpring is one example. But as these models scale up, “they will attract traditional investors,” says Rao of Acumen. For instance, Song Advisors, an investor in Eye-Q, looks at a combi- nation of financial return and socio-economic development. And of Glocal’s two investors, Elevar Equity is focused on improving services to the base of the pyramid while Sequoia is a mainstream pri- vate equity investor. “Healthcare in the space that we are investing has the potential to grow 50% to 100% year on year,” says Rai. “Since we invest in the early stage, valuations normally scale up and you may find an exit to the next round of investors.” Will large corporate chains end up acquiring such companies? “As India advances its healthcare deliv- ery system to create a wider deliv- ery base, we need many more such models,” says Fortis’ Bali. “They don’t necessarily have to converge with the larger players but can enjoy their space.” (Additional reporting by Vikas Kumar) Special Feature Low-cost Healthcare 6 THE ECONOMIC TIMES | BANGALORE | THURSDAY | 12 MAY 2011 A small but growing band of companies wants to make healthcare affordable, accessible, and ubiquitous. Like the larger groups, their services are of a high quality, but costs are kept under a tight leash. With early models starting to scale, social investors are not the only ones being drawn to such companies, writes Gauri Kamath These companies focus on low-value but high- frequency services, which helps them cut set-up costs The Udipis of Healthcare F Started 2005 Hospitals 10 Promoter: Ashwin Naik and Veerendra Hiremath Investors: Aavishkaar, Oasis fund and Seedfund Expansion Plans: From two states to five states in 5 years Model: Set up affordable secondary care hospitals in semi-urban and rural areas Focus: High-frequency, rela- tively low-value procedures such as maternity, paedi- atrics, general surgery, inter- nal medicine, dialysis, mini- mally-invasive procedures Early challenges: Hiring and retaining doctors and nurses “You have to reduce capex drastically so as not to worry about recovering it over a fixed period” Some solutions Bring back specialists native to the town who have moved to the city because of no local options or infrastructure Partner local nursing colleges for internship and to design curriculum Employ local doctors to generate visibility for the brand ASHWIN NAIK Co-founder & CEO, Vaatsalya A visiting doctor from Eye-Q’s Gurgaon hub examines a patient at its spoke hospital in Rewari, 82 km away from Delhi ASHWANI NAGPAL VAATSALYA Started 2007 Hospitals 11 Promoter: Rajat Goel and Ajay Sharma Investors: Song Advisors Expansion Plans: 50 in the next two-and-a-half years Model: Hub-and-spoke. Hub is a super-speciality hospital in a city while spokes are smaller hospitals in tier-2 and 3 towns. Focus: Complete range of eye care or ophthalmology services Early challenges: Attracting doctors. Since eyecare is technology-intensive, keeping equipment cost down while making the service affordable “We found that even 100 km beyond Delhi, healthcare infrastructure was poor... we brought in better quality at the same price” Some solutions Partner local doctors by buying out and refurbishing their practice and keeping them in charge Share doctors and less frequently-used equip- ment (like for the retina) between several centres located within a specific radius RAJAT GOEL Co-founder & CEO, Eye-Q EYE-Q Started 2005 Hospitals 09 Promoter: HLL LifeCare Investors: Acumen Fund Expansion Plans: 30 by July 2012 Model: Network of low-cost hospitals in cities for the urban working poor Focus: Maternity, child birth and other gynaecological pro- cedures Early challenges: Keeping set-up costs down, assuring patient compliance “We ask prospective employees to visit a government and private set-up before they decide to join us” Some solutions Be ruthless about cost not related to care Outsource pharmacy and lab services, don’t procure medicines upfront Health workers, nurses fan out into community ANANT KUMAR CEO, Lifespring LIFESPRING Started 2002 Hospitals 05 Promoter: Indu Singh Investors: Aavishkaar Expansion Plans: Reach 12 in two years Model: Set up a hub-and- spoke model of secondary care hospitals in cities and small towns and a network of micro-clinics in villages Focus: Super-speciality care in the hub, secondary care in spokes, primary in micro clinics Early challenges: Big city lure among doctors makes hiring and retention tough, paucity of trained auxiliary staff, finding inexpensive locations “When people seek out healthcare, they come prepared to sell their land” INDU SINGH MD, GV Meditech Some solutions Coax doctors to travel to spokes once a week by providing comfortable travel and lodging. Use telemedicine. Partner with large hospital for specialist support Use government skilling programmes to train locals for micro clinics Partner local panchayats for space to run micro clinics GV MEDITECH

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Page 1: Udupi’s Of Healthcare

or the rich, famous and pregnantliving in Hyderabad’s upmarketJubilee Hills, there is The Cradle, ahigh-end, luxury ‘birthing centre’recently launched by Apollo Hospi-tals. It’s a relatively new idea, at thetop end of India’s booming privatehealthcare business. But the biggerinnovations are happening at theother end of the economic spec-trum, closer to the bottom of thepyramid. One such is unfolding atLifeSpring Hospitals in Chilkalgu-da, Secunderabad, less than anhour’s drive from Jubilee Hills.

Many of the city’s poor live inChilkalguda. When their women gointo labour, some head to Life-Spring. It is clean, airy and well-staffed. Its rates for maternal deliv-eries and surgeries such as hys-terectomies are displayed promi-nently on a board outside the gener-al ward. Normal deliveries cost`4,000, a fraction of what other pri-vate hospitals would charge. Forpoor patients, the rates are as mucha source of comfort as the treat-ment itself.

Inside the ward, each bed is sepa-rated by a pink curtain and there isa separate cot for a caregiver. Theenvironment is frugal, functionaland affordable.

“All our hospitals are close to urban slums and the working poor,”says Anant Kumar, CEO of thematernity hospital chain whichruns nine centres in AndhraPradesh, including in Rajah-mundry, Vijaywada and Nellore.“Our customers will not travel more than 2 to 5 kilometres for delivery.”

Cut to Rewari, a town of one lakhpeople in Haryana, 82 km south-west of Delhi. Known for its brassproducts and close to the industrialhub of Manesar, Rewari is notexactly the boondocks. Yet, last yearwhen resident Jagannath Bathla,73, needed cataract surgery for hisright eye, it felt like one.

Bathla would have to travel 50 km by road one way to the town ofMahendragarh for something city-dwellers would get in the neigh-bourhood. Then he heard of Eye-Q,a new eye hospital right in the heartof Rewari. In September last year,he got his right eye operated thereand was back for the left earlier thismonth. “It’s just five minutes to the hospital,” he says.

Eye-Q is targeting smaller citiesbecause people end up wasting timeand money, and foregoing income totravel for care, says Rajat Goel,founder CEO who teamed up witheye surgeon Ajay Sharma to startthe company in 2007. EyeQ runs 10hospitals in places such as Hald-wani and Sahranpur in northernIndia where it charges 30% less forsurgeries than its super-specialityhub in Gurgaon. “It is providing aGurgaon facility at Rewari prices,”says Vishal Vasishth, founder MD of Song Investment Advisors, which invested an undisclosed amount in Eye Q in 2010.

TIGHT COST CONTROLS

For the better part of the lastdecade, a small but growing numberof entrepreneurs have been invest-ing their energies and resources toanswer a question that mostlyengages only policy makers andcharities — how do you make quali-ty healthcare affordable, accessible

and ubiquitous?“Initially, the approach was build

and people will come,’” says AshwinNaik, CEO and co-founder of Ban-galore-based Vaatsalya, which ven-tured into semi-urban areas of Kar-nataka with its brand of multi-spe-ciality hospitals in 2005. It now has10 such centres. “But over time theindustry realised that one shopdoesn’t work for everybody.”Affordable healthcare is not entire-ly new to the private sector.Deviprasad Shetty’s heart hospitalNarayana Hrudayalaya and charita-ble eye hospitals SankaraNethralaya and LV Prasad offerhigh-quality, affordable care. Butthey are exceptions, present only incities. “Momentum has just comeinto affordable healthcare,” saysAbhishek Singh, head (healthcare) at Crisil Risk & Infrastructure Advi-sory. “Even the lower middle classhas been getting conscious aboutquality but did not have options at areasonable cost.” LifeSpring andVaatsalya have been early moversand their growth has emboldenedothers, including investors.

“The biggest learning from Vaat-salya is that this model is worth-while and scaleable,” says VineetRai, founder CEO of venture capitalfirm Aavishkaar, an investor in thecompany. Last year, Rai’s venturefund put an undisclosed amountinto New Delhi’s GV Meditech tohelp it expand beyond one hub hos-pital in Benares into several spokehospitals — smaller than the huband with limited specialties — andmicro clinics in villages and townsof Uttar Pradesh. Meditech’sfounder MD, gynaecologist InduSingh, had been mulling over this.But Aavishkaar “possibly strength-ened her conviction by telling herwe had done it before,” says Rai.

Similarly, in 2010, Kolkata-basedstart-up Glocal Healthcare raised `15 crore from Sequoia Capital, andElevar Equity to set up eight ruralhospitals in a year. It has ambitionsof doing 2,000 such hospitals overseven years. The first one will beready this June, says CEO Sabahat Azim.

Make no mistake. Low cost doesnot mean cutting corners. Rather, itis “about providing quality withoutthe corresponding price increasesor at lower cost,” says Meghna Rao,country director, Acumen Fund,which invested `5 crore in LifeSpring in 2008.

Doctors are paid competitively;there is investment in training ofauxiliary staff; there are hospitalinformation technology systems tokeep track of patients and clinicaloutcomes; patient feedback is alsoactively sought.

These companies are high-quali-ty, replicable, and scaleable justlike the large chains, but with somekey differences. The aim is to havehospitals that are accessible andefficient, run with a tight controlon cost, and a firm grip on pricing.“It demands tremendous manage-ment since they have to work on atight budget,” says MuralidharanNair, partner (healthcare), Ernst &Young. They are much like theUdipi hotels known for inexpensivequality fare.

SHARED RESOURCES

Hospitals have always been high-cost, high-gestation projects. It costs

`80 lakh to `1 crore per bed to set upa tertiary care hospital in a big city.Such hospitals focus on big-ticketsurgeries such as heart or cancer.But these entrepreneurs focus onlow-value but high-frequency serv-ices, whether it is child birth, gallbladder surgery, eye care or kidneydialysis. This helps them cut set-upcosts and use volumes to drive oper-ational costs lower. “We have foundthat 95% of the health need in ruralareas is secondary care,” says Azim.

“India needs more models in pri-mary and secondary care,” saysVishal Bali, CEO, Fortis Global.

They build small hospitals. EachLifeSpring centre has 20-25 beds,Vaatsalaya has 70-100. Vaatsalyaalso does not invest in specialisedtools such as CT scanners that costcrores if they are available locally.It chooses to refer patients there.“We have made it clear that we arein the business of appropriate tech-nology and not latest technology,”says Naik.

There’s another reason for thisprudence. “Conventionally, everyhospital puts in everything into thesystem and then the doctor gets acommission on every procedureperformed which is an incentive forunnecessary investigation,” saysAzim of Glocal.

Eye-Q’s network shares both doc-tors and equipment. For instance,retina equipment is expensive butnot used as frequently as a ‘phaco’

or cataract machine.So a retina specialisttravels once a weekto four centres fromthe hub with theequipment in theback of a car or bytrain. These centreshave pooled patientsin advance.

This sharing hashelped cut the cost ofa centre from the ini-

tially estimated `2.5 crore to `90lakh. This also helps maintain con-sistency of service quality, saysDeependra Vikram Singh, a retinaspecialist at Eye-Q who travels everyweek to Rewari, among other towns.“Because specialists are movingacross, they can observe any defi-ciencies (in the smaller hospitals) tohelp improve and ensure that quali-ty of eye-care becomes uniform.”

“We reduce cost not by providingless, but providing more, more effi-ciently,” says Glocal’s Azim. “At`9,000 for a C-section we get the sametarget profit margin as a private hos-pital gets charging `20,000 becauseour costs are low,” says LifeSpring’sKumar. Such low-cost chains couldbreak even in 6-18 months.

THE HARD ROAD

In 2009, when Vaatsalya firstapproached Manjunath Doshetty, akidney specialist, working in Ban-galore’s reputed Manipal Hospital,he hadn’t heard of them. But Vaat-salya, it appeared, had researchedhim thoroughly. They knew thatDoshetty was a native of Gulbargain North Karnataka where theywere planning to start their newesthospital. Doshetty admits that theabsence of infrastructure and staffto practise his discipline in hishometown had forced him to moveto Bangalore. Dialysis requiredequipment, qualified nursing staffand an intensive care unit with

trained paramedics. There was allof one in Gulbarga, and it wasn’t upto speed. Vaatsalya was promisingto change that.

Doshetty knew there was demand— many of his patients travelled allthe way from Gulbarga to Banga-lore some 600 km away. Others weretravelling 100 km to Sholapur. Achat with doctors in other Vaatsalyahospitals convinced him and he has-n’t looked back. “We are growing tobe a good family now,” he says. Vat-salya has hired 20 such consultantsfrom cities, native to Gulbarga, andmoved them to its hospital, he adds.

This is tougher in some areas. InUttar Pradesh, “there is a paucity ofmany trained doctors who are will-ing to work in slightly more remoteareas,” says Rai. Meditech hasstruggled to find doctors for its‘spoke’ hospital in Ghazipur, a two-hour drive away. Currently, a gynae-cologist, a cardiologist, anorthopaedic surgeon, and an eyesurgeon travel once a week or fort-nightly from the hub to the spoke.“Initially the doctors did not want totravel,” admits founder Singh, butwith her persistence and with thelocals fussing over them, the doctorshave come around. The companyhas also firmed up a satellite linkwith ISRO which will help provideremote care. Others such as EyeQpartner with senior doctors whoalready have a local nursing homebut none to bequeath it to. EyeQtakes over their practice, upgradesit and puts them in charge.

An important carrot, says Azim of Glocal, is the absence of pressureto justify the hospital’s capital investment by advising unnecessarytests, or procedures. This is echoedby the other hospitals. “We have notargets and we don’t ask them to dounnecessary hysterectomies,” saysLifeSpring’s Kumar. (AndhraPradesh is known for such practices).

MILES TO GO

Soon, it will be time for these low-cost entrepreneurs to expand, forwhich they will need capital. Initial-ly, only social investors — those whodo not measure returns in financialterms alone — backed them. TheAcumen Fund that has invested inLifeSpring is one example. But asthese models scale up, “they willattract traditional investors,” saysRao of Acumen.

For instance, Song Advisors, aninvestor in Eye-Q, looks at a combi-nation of financial return andsocio-economic development. Andof Glocal’s two investors, ElevarEquity is focused on improvingservices to the base of the pyramidwhile Sequoia is a mainstream pri-vate equity investor.

“Healthcare in the space that weare investing has the potential togrow 50% to 100% year on year,”says Rai. “Since we invest in theearly stage, valuations normallyscale up and you may find an exit tothe next round of investors.”

Will large corporate chains endup acquiring such companies? “AsIndia advances its healthcare deliv-ery system to create a wider deliv-ery base, we need many more suchmodels,” says Fortis’ Bali. “Theydon’t necessarily have to convergewith the larger players but canenjoy their space.”

(Additional reporting by Vikas Kumar)

Special Feature Low-cost Healthcare6 THE ECONOMIC TIMES | BANGALORE | THURSDAY | 12 MAY 2011

A small but growing band of companies wants to make healthcare affordable, accessible, and ubiquitous. Like the

larger groups, their services are of a high quality, but costs are kept under a tight leash. With early models starting

to scale, social investors are not the only ones being drawn to such companies, writes Gauri Kamath

These

companies

focus on

low-value

but high-

frequency

services,

which helps

them cut

set-up costs

The Udipis of Healthcare

F

Started

2005Hospitals

10

Promoter: Ashwin Naik

and Veerendra Hiremath

Investors: Aavishkaar,

Oasis fund and Seedfund

Expansion Plans: From two

states to five states in 5 years

Model: Set up affordable

secondary care hospitals in

semi-urban and rural areas

Focus: High-frequency, rela-

tively low-value procedures

such as maternity, paedi-

atrics, general surgery, inter-

nal medicine, dialysis, mini-

mally-invasive procedures

Early challenges: Hiring

and retaining doctors

and nurses

“You have

to reduce

capex

drastically

so as not to

worry about

recovering

it over a fixed period”

Some solutions

� Bring back specialists

native to the town who

have moved to the city

because of no local

options or infrastructure

� Partner local nursing

colleges for internship

and to design curriculum

� Employ local doctors to

generate visibility for

the brand

ASHWIN NAIKCo-founder & CEO, Vaatsalya

A visiting doctor from Eye-Q’s Gurgaon hub examines a patient at its spoke hospital in Rewari, 82 km away from Delhi ASHWANI NAGPAL

VAATSALYA

Started

2007Hospitals

11

Promoter: Rajat Goel and

Ajay Sharma

Investors: Song Advisors

Expansion Plans: 50 in the

next two-and-a-half years

Model: Hub-and-spoke. Hub

is a super-speciality hospital

in a city while spokes are

smaller hospitals in tier-2

and 3 towns.

Focus: Complete range of

eye care or ophthalmology

services

Early challenges: Attracting

doctors. Since eyecare is

technology-intensive, keeping

equipment cost down while

making the service affordable

“We found

that even 100

km beyond

Delhi,

healthcare

infrastructure

was poor... we

brought in better quality at

the same price”

Some solutions

� Partner local doctors

by buying out and

refurbishing their

practice and keeping

them in charge

� Share doctors and less

frequently-used equip-

ment (like for the

retina) between several

centres located within a

specific radius

RAJAT GOELCo-founder & CEO, Eye-Q

EYE-Q

Started

2005Hospitals

09

Promoter: HLL LifeCare

Investors: Acumen Fund

Expansion Plans: 30 by

July 2012

Model: Network of low-cost

hospitals in cities for the

urban working poor

Focus: Maternity, child birth

and other gynaecological pro-

cedures

Early challenges: Keeping

set-up costs down, assuring

patient compliance

“We ask

prospective

employees

to visit a

government

and private

set-up before they

decide to join us”

Some solutions

� Be ruthless about cost

not related to care

� Outsource pharmacy and

lab services, don’t procure

medicines upfront

� Health workers, nurses

fan out into community

ANANT KUMARCEO, Lifespring

LIFESPRING

Started

2002Hospitals

05Promoter: Indu Singh

Investors: Aavishkaar

Expansion Plans: Reach 12 in

two years

Model: Set up a hub-and-

spoke model of secondary

care hospitals in cities and

small towns and a network

of micro-clinics in villages

Focus: Super-speciality care in

the hub, secondary care in

spokes, primary in

micro clinics

Early challenges: Big city

lure among doctors makes

hiring and retention tough,

paucity of trained auxiliary

staff, finding inexpensive

locations

“When

people

seek out

healthcare,

they come

prepared

to sell their land”

INDU SINGHMD, GV Meditech

Some solutions

� Coax doctors to travel to

spokes once a week by

providing comfortable

travel and lodging. Use

telemedicine.

� Partner with large hospital

for specialist support

� Use government skilling

programmes to train

locals for micro clinics

� Partner local panchayats for

space to run micro clinics

GV MEDITECH