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TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

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TeleMed 2.0 Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India
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Page 1: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

TeleMed 2.0‘Next Generation Telemedicine’

By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India

Page 2: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Gnanananda Mayam DevamNirmala Spatika Kruthim

Aadharam Sarva VidyanamHayagrivam Upasmahe

I promise myself before the Lord, who is the personification of knowledge and Happiness, who is very pure, and who is the

basis of all learning

Saraswathi Namasthubyam,Varadey Kaamarupinee!

Vidhyarambham Karishyami,Sidhir bhavathu mey sada

Oh Goddess, Saraswathi, my humble salutations to you, who are the fulfiller of all my wishes. I start my studies with the

request that thou will bestow Thy blessings on me

Prayer

Page 3: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Around 83 million living in rural India are affected by

Hypertension

Around 25 million living in rural

India are affected by Diabetes

Out of this 830 million, 66% of them do not have access to

critical medicine

It is estimated that close to 830 million people (69% of Indian Population) live in 640,867

villages across India

Close to 31% of rural Indians have to travel more than

30kms to seek basic health care

About 30% rural Indians never visit hospitals because of high

medical expenses

Source: Tenet - IIT; The Hindu, Ministry of Healthcare India

Healthcare in India – Hard facts

Page 4: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Recently, National Rural Health Mission (NHRM) has been allocated close to 20,822 Crore (USD 4.14 billion) in 2012-13 for rural healthcare initiatives.

The Indian rural healthcare is expected to expand at a pace of 44% by 2015, totaling its worth to USD 8.8 billion.

The CAGR of medical tourists to India is over 19% and it is estimated that around 1.3 million medical tourists will reach India by 2013. India’s medical tourism is in the growth path and India’s share in the global medical tourism industry will reach around 3 per cent by the end of 2013.

The current geriatric services market in India is about USD 250 million, but is expected to grow to USD 1 billion by 2012 and USD 2 billion by 2017. The Indian home-healthcare market stands at USD 1.5 billion.

Being the home for 17.5% of world population with world-class doctors and state-of-the-art medical facilities, India can provide the best in class health care across the globe.

Market Opportunity“Rural healthcare India has a significant growth potential, as market still remains untapped.”

Source: Express Healthcare, "Booming Medical Tourism in India" by RNCOS

IS INDIA READY TO LEAD THE HEALTHCARE ACROSS THE GLOBE?

Page 5: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Urban vs. Rural divide

Access to resources, infrastructure and medical facilities

With the shortage of specialists and physicians, it is impossible for them to keep travelling long distances for attending cases.

Loss of income from being away from place of work. This keeps the rural Indians away from seeking medical facilities for chronic diseases that can be cured by periodic check-up

Lack of specialist-care for Geriatrics due to inability to travel from home

The personal care and constant medical attention given to medical tourists while they were in India is missed when the medical tourists leave the country after treatment.

Medical tourists need to real on the local physicians for postoperative care and periodic check-ups after discharge. Medical tourists would prefer to continue the relationship with the doctor that provided the medical attention for the same and is not possible now.

Limiting Factors that keep Patients away from Quality Healthcare

We can’t go far with conventional brick-and-mortal hospitals and Telemedicine is the way forward

- Prof. K. Ganapathy, President, Apollo Telemedicine Networking Foundation

Page 6: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Even though India has world-class physicians and state-of-the-art facilities, the ability to reach the patients requiring care is limited to the walk-ins to hospitals or nursing homes.

With the shortage of specialists and physicians, it is impossible for them to keep travelling long distances for attending cases.

Telemedicine brings remote patients needing care closer to physicians.

Why Telemedicine?

“Estimates suggest that the telemedicine market is at least for 800 million Indians. Even if half of these 800 million need to consult a specialist once a year, [that still amounts to] 400 million specialist consultations per year. Even if 10% of these are enabled through telemedicine we are talking about 40 million consultations per year from rural India alone…. The market potential for telemedicine is obviously enormous.”

-Prof K. Ganapathy

Source: Indian Knowledge @ Wharton: Can Telemedicine Alleviate India's Health Care Problems?

Page 7: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Limited to Video Conferencing facilities linking patients with specialists

Required dedicated infrastructure, high capital requirements and computer savvy talent pool to access sophisticated systems

Not providing better time management for specialists. In some cases, the specialists are required to wait on call for all day long to handle a few patient cases.

Requires specialist/physician to be in the conferencing location for the day to handle patient calls and it makes them immobile.

Is only an extended communication system and doesn’t meet requirements to address the challenges.

Telemedicine – Current Status

Page 8: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Remote Patient Care and Intelligent Monitoring System

From Wired to Wireless

From Fixed Infrastructure to Mobile

Cost-effective, Simple to Use

Accessible, Anywhere, Anytime 24 x 7 – Cuts across the boundaries of Geographical Limitation.

TeleMed 2.0

Here is how it works…

Page 9: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

TeleMed 2.0 Preview

Page 10: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Indian Healthcare – The Way Forward‘Telemed 2.0’

Page 11: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Your Virtual Clinic – Extending your presence to reach the far

Existing Infrastructural investments put to better use

Providing quality patient care to the needy

Levering on new generation technologies to enhance the existing setup

Mobile Phones HIS.

Cost-effective, Simple to Use.

Accessible, Anywhere, Anytime 24 x 7 – Cuts across the boundaries of Geographical Limitation.

TeleMed 2.0 - Summary

Page 12: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Health is Wealth

Let us put the health into safer hands for treatment

Page 13: TeleMed 2.0 ‘ TeleMed 2.0 ‘ Next Generation Telemedicine’ By, Sridharan Mani CEO, AMI India.

Thank You

Kindly visit us at the AMI booth to see this technology in action.


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