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In the Pink of Health

As corporate hospitals mushroom and medicine goes hi-tech, domestic IT players eye the booming local healthcare space

G Shrikanth

Friday, May 30, 2003

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Surprising though this might sound, India is in many ways the Mecca of medicine. Compared to most developing nations it offers very sophisticated and high quality treatment. In large hospitals across the country, treatment is now being offered at levels equal to, and sometimes better than, the best hospitals around the world. It isn’t surprising then that the IT industry is now beginning to look at the healthcare vertical as a major growth segment.

According to industry analysts, any hospital with a minimum capacity of 100 beds is a potential IT-buyer. With an estimated 1,000 hospitals in that category Nasscom believes that healthcare organizations in India will spend around Rs1,000 crore on IT in the current year. And what’s going to drive IT adoption in this segment is the hospital management system and networking hardware required for processes like telemedicine.

Solutions for ‘100-plus’ hospitals

Wipro: Hospital Information System and HIRePS

TCS: Integrated Hospital Management System (IHMS)
Siemens Information Systems: SISL HIS
Alstosys Software: Altomed

Some major corporate hospitals have already put state-of-the-art IT backbones in place. Apollo Hospital in Chennai, for one, has commissioned a Rs35-crore telemedicine project. Telemedicine though will be the domain of big corporate hospitals for a while and it is the HMS market that holds out good potential. Among other things hospital management software helps automate workflow processes and archiving all data.

The need for IT
"The Healthcare segment in India is going through the kind of evolution that the banking and financial services sector went through a decade ago. In many of the hospitals they have either disparate systems running or some small systems developed in-house. This neither gives the desired results nor can they be integrated with newer systems. There is a great need for healthcare delivery networks to have an integrated system which will fulfill all their requirements", says Anand Sankaran, head–Healthcare, Wipro Infotech.

"There’s a growing need for healthcare delivery networks to have in place an integrated system which fulfils all
key requirements"
Anand Sankaran head (healthcare), Wipro Infotech

Needless to say a majority of the hospitals in the country are rooted in manual processes increasingly unable to cope with the volume of data generated. In the larger hospitals, patient records literally take up thousands of square feet of space and still remain difficult to access. Given that, automation is the only solution that will liberate hospitals from hassles like these. The government hospitals are also one potential area for the IT companies. For instance, the government still owns 66% of the Indian hospital market. With e-governance being the foremost thought these days, companies like TCS and Wipro are hoping that government controlled hospitals will soon find the impetus too.

Case Study: 

Kovai Medical Center: A Paperless Hospital

For those hospitals which are yet to be convinced about the benefits of IT, here’s a case study that showcases the benefits of a good hospital management system 
Problem
The Coimbatore-based Kovai Medical Center Hospital is a Rs 50-crore, 350-bed multi-disciplinary, super-specialty corporate hospital. There are over 30 medical departments and 11 operation theatres here. Nearly 500 outpatients and inpatients are treated and 25 major and minor surgeries are performed daily. KMCH was started in 1990 and though it subsequently implemented an IT solution, it wasn’t able to integrate all the processes. Part of the problem was the solution was ready-made and did not customize too well with the hospital’s processes. The solution was also rigid and new modules had to be added as stand- alone pieces. 
Cure
The hospital approached TCS for a solution that was robust and flexible at the same time and was capable of handling huge volumes of data every day. The company offered it a Hospital Information Management System spanning all functional areas starting from the reception to digitization of medical records. With the HMS in place, KMCH has virtually become a paperless hospital.
Impact
Since the system is completely centralized, the risk of fraud is minimized. Before HMS, there were some misappropriations in terms of new medicine requests that were sent as paper requests. Now the medicine requests get directly printed in the stores printer. The long and laborious admission/discharge process has also been rationalized and now takes only a few minutes. Another big boon is round-the-clock access to archived and current patient information.

Vendors in the fray
Though IT companies of all sizes compete in this space, the three major players are Wipro, TCS and Siemens Information Systems Ltd (SISL).

Wipro for instance has been a pro-active player in the healthcare space over the years. It addresses the healthcare industry through a division called Wipro Healthcare. This division addresses the IT needs of Healthcare markets in India, Asia-Pacific, Australia and Middle East and brings to the table a reasonably complete range of IT services including domain specific solutions for healthcare organizations. "We combine our knowledge of business domains with our expertise across various technologies. Our end-to-end solutions cover the entire spectrum of the healthcare industry’s needs. We have over 200 person years of experience in executing healthcare projects and have worked with over 30 top hospitals in India and other geographies", says Sankaran.

Wipro offers a slew of solutions including a Hospital Information System (HIS), Picture Archival Communication System (PACS) and telemedicine solutions. However one of its biggest achievements might be its Hospital Information Resource Planning System (HIRePS). This is a new generation enterprise wide software solution that covers all aspects of hospital management. The solution is spread across 60 modules covering functionalities like administration, clinical, support and back office among others.

“Healthcare represents a hot opportunity for Indian IT firms. Keeping this potential in mind, we plan to raise the number of healthcare domain specialists at TCS from the current level of 450 to about 900 by the end of the next calendar year”
J Rajagopal, director (healthcare
practice), Tata Consultancy Services

Competing head on with Wipro is TCS. The company helps hospitals to provide managed care through its solutions. It has a two-pronged approach—specific solutions and a healthcare portal. The company’s healthcare solutions include the TATA HMS and Intensive Care Unit Management Systems (ICUMS) and its portal - www.webhealthcentre.com - provides free online medical advice for anyone who wants medical information online. According to J Rajagopal, the director of the global life sciences and healthcare practice at TCS, "Healthcare represents a large opportunity for IT companies. Keeping the potential in mind we plan to increase our healthcare domain specialists from the current 450 professionals to about 900 in the next 18 months".

Siemens Information Systems Ltd (SISL) is yet another player to reckon with. The company’s hospital solution has been implemented at the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences—a 900-bed multi specialty hospital based in Cochin. This is one of the few MNCs in India gunning for the local market. It had one of the first hospital information systems in the country developed entirely by an Indian team and launched in 1996. SISL now sells the solution across the world.

Advantage enterprise
Some major implementations are already underway. For instance, TCS is currently implementing the complete suite of 22 modules of its HMS at the Chennai-based Sankara Nethralaya, Asia’s largest ophthalmology Hospital. Another one is Woodlands Hospitals of Kolkata, which is also going in for an HMS from TCS. The company believes that management solutions not only provide workflow benefits, they also help strategic growth through ushering in management best practices.

There are still challenges ahead however. As Rajagopal puts it, "The key challenge is sensitizing hospital managements on the benefits of an enterprise wide IT solution". To this end TCS recently organized road shows called "Pulse–Technology for Healthcare" in six different cities in India. The road show attracted nearly 500 participants from across the country and the company believes it filled a vacuum—creating a forum where medical professionals could come and talk about trends and advances in IT in the healthcare industry.

G Shrikanth





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