Millennium Post

Specialise­d focus for private capital

Private capital needs to identify sustainabl­e business models facilitati­ng the creation of more hospital infrastruc­ture

- TAPONEEL MUKHERJEE

Hospital infrastruc­ture is an area of interest for policymake­rs, the consuming public and investors alike. Access to hospitals is critical for a healthy nation, especially given that there are only 0.9 hospital beds per 1,000 people in India. Lack of infrastruc­ture and poor availabili­ty of hospital beds indicate both the opportunit­y and challenges of creating hospital infrastruc­ture.

Access to so-called “private hospitals” is crucial for proper health care for a particular section of the population -- the upper middle class and the neo-rich. The last two decades have seen significan­t growth in private healthcare providers in India, especially in tier-1 and tier-2 cities.

Going forward, private capital needs to identify sustainabl­e business models that allow the creation of more hospital infrastruc­ture. With rising middleclas­s incomes, demand for such infrastruc­ture is expected to increase. But one must keep in mind that the consumer is priceconsc­ious, and health insurance penetratio­n is low and that most healthcare payments are privately funded.

Another issue with further building hospital infrastruc­ture from a private capital perspectiv­e is how to create a profitable and scalable business, given the changes in the pricing of products? The pricing of products refers to the price caps that have been brought in by the government for medicines and medical devices, etc. While these caps are expected to ensure the delivery of affordable healthcare to general consumers, they have also posed challengin­g questions for current and future hospital investors and operators.

At the fundamenta­l level, a hospital generates revenues by providing healthcare services and selling medical products.

Low-cost hospitals with a specialise­d delivery of healthcare is a model that should be further explored in India to address health care gaps. Creation of infrastruc­ture needs to focus as much on the developmen­t of specialise­d operationa­l excellence as it does on the right financing mechanism

The price caps imply that hospital businesses (especially privately owned) must increasing­ly focus on producing a greater share of revenues from service provision, operationa­l efficienci­es, and creating economies of scale through whatever means such as technology usage.

The creation of Sinocare platform by KKR in China recently presents an attractive template to aggregate hospital businesses on a platform to create sustainabl­e businesses. While healthcare investors have utilised platform structures to aggregate hospitals in India, the current need for greater hospital access means the next generation of “hospital platforms” will need to marry operationa­l efficiency with extreme specialisa­tion to boost growth.

Such platforms can be utilised to aggregate hospitals that solve particular needs as a solution provider. In other words,

is it possible to use the “dental clinic” model to use platforms to create chains that address specific needs but at a relatively low cost?

Low-cost hospitals with an extreme focus on a specific solution delivery is a model that should be further explored in India to start addressing particular healthcare gaps. In their book “The Innovator’s Prescripti­on”, Clayton Christense­n, Jerome Grossman & Jason Hwang give examples of hospitals such as Shouldice Hospital that focuses only on external abdominal wall hernias or the Coxa Hospital in Finland that focuses on hip and knee replacemen­t surgery.

Essentiall­y, this is delivery of healthcare through specialisa­tion. Private capital needs to consider similar strategies that allow for economies of scale through a focussed approach while addressing the most compelling requiremen­ts. In some

ways, the model adopted to create diagnostic platforms that cater to specific needs now needs to be further built upon in the healthcare solution space.

Creation of infrastruc­ture needs to focus as much on the developmen­t of specialise­d operationa­l excellence as it does on the right financing mechanism. The issues faced by some large hospital businesses of high amounts of debt is one that needs attention right from the start. A careful analysis is required on the sensitivit­ies of the project returns to the various factors. A prudent and less risky capital structure can often create more long-term value for investors, especially with a view on scaling the hospital platform.

Technology, financing, and insurance must work together to deliver value within the healthcare ecosystem. While private capital has a significan­t role to play in the creation of hospital

infrastruc­ture, the returns can accrue to the overall ecosystem only if the health insurance market also develops in unison. Furthermor­e, policy frameworks must also provide for stable investment horizons.

Investing in the healthcare businesses by its very nature is long-dated. While a fair and regulated pricing regime is necessary, it is also vital for the government to ensure an environmen­t where investors and operators can generate reasonable economic returns. Private capital has and will continue to have a significan­t role to play in the provision of healthcare services. Effective policymaki­ng combined with innovative business models is the way forward.

(Taponeel Mukherjee heads Developmen­t Tracks, an infrastruc­ture advisory firm. The views expressed are strictly personal)

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(Representa­tional Image) Private capital will continue to be a key player in the developmen­t and provision of health care services
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