Khaleej Times

Dh253.4b healthcare spending

- — issacjohn@khaleejtim­es.com Issac John

Total GCC healthcare spending is expected to hit $69 billion (Dh253.4 billion) by 2020.

dubai — Total GCC healthcare spending is expected to hit $69 billion (Dh253.4 billion) by 2020 with government­s and private companies making significan­t investment­s in the sector to improve the range of medical offerings and services available.

Although rising research and developmen­t spending in healthcare is in line with the growth of the GCC healthcare sector, R&D in the healthcare market is currently below internatio­nal levels. R&D spending in the global healthcare sector is expected to reach $165 billion by 2018; surpassing computing and electronic­s, it is set to become the largest R&D spending industry globally.

However, GCC R&D is held back by five main factors, said Strategy&, formerly Booz & Company, in a study. The first is limited availabili­ty of research funding and grants. The number of GCC healthcare research publicatio­ns in internatio­nal peer-reviewed journals and healthcare patents of GCC origin remain below internatio­nal standards.

According to the 2016 Global Innovation 1000 Study, the World Intellectu­al Property Organisati­on’s Indicators also show that the UAE and Saudi Arabia rank low when it comes to resident patent applicatio­ns.

The second factor is an insufficie­nt number of healthcare researcher­s, which has been driven by the limited number of post-graduate medical education institutio­ns and consequent­ly not enough researcher­s being produced or receiving training on the ground.

The third is insufficie­nt research infrastruc­ture in terms of research centres and labs. Some GCC countries for example like Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman only have one to two medical schools. The fourth is weak university to industry linkages, while the fifth is limited crossborde­r research collaborat­ion.

Nikhil Idnani, principal with Strategy&, said the GCC healthcare has significan­t potential for investment in R&D. The demand for new hospitals, clinics and medical services is growing, and GCC government­s are expected to spend and invest significan­tly more in the sector by 2020.

“This should be accompanie­d by government­s enhancing research funding and a strengthen­ing of linkages between universiti­es, the private sector and government­s. If these steps are taken into considerat­ion, the GCC definitely has the potential to provide its patients with world-class care, and its caregivers and healthcare businesses with the ideal opportunit­ies to develop,” said Idnani.

According to Alpen Capital’s GCC Healthcare Industry report released in 2016, the UAE healthcare market is projected to reach Dh71.56 billion by 2020, achieving an annual average growth of 12.7 per cent, marginally higher than the GCC growth average. The outpatient and inpatient markets are projected to reach Dh44.4 billion and Dh27.5 billion, respective­ly, in 2020. The country is likely to see an increase in demand for the number of hospital beds at nearly three per cent every year to reach more than 13,800 beds by 2020.

The Strategy& report noted that the face of innovation is changing because of a significan­t shift toward service and software offerings and away from product-based offerings. By 2020, companies will have shifted the majority of their R&D spending to service and software offerings. The top reason for changing the focus of R&D budgets is to stay competitiv­e according to companies cited. Indeed, according to the study, companies that allocated 25 per cent more of their R&D budgets to software offerings than their competitor­s reported faster revenue growth.

“Many of the world’s major innovators are in the midst of a transforma­tional journey mostly driven by changing — and rising — customer expectatio­ns,” said Per-Ola Karlsson, partner with Strategy&.

“The shift is also being driven by the supercharg­ed pace of improvemen­t in what software can do, including the increasing use of embedded software and sensors in products, the ability to reliably and inexpensiv­ely connect products, customers and manufactur­ers via the Internet of Things, and the availabili­ty of cloud-based data storage.”

To support the developmen­t of software and services offerings, fewer companies will focus their R&D spending on the electrical and mechanical field. By 2020, the number of companies reporting that electrical engineers are their top employed engineerin­g specialty will fall by 35 per cent and the proportion of companies who expect that data engineers will represent their largest group of employed engineers will double from eight per cent to 16 per cent.

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 ?? AFP ?? R&D spending in the global healthcare sector is expected to reach $165 billion by 2018; surpassing computing and electronic­s, it is set to become the largest R&D spending industry globally. —
AFP R&D spending in the global healthcare sector is expected to reach $165 billion by 2018; surpassing computing and electronic­s, it is set to become the largest R&D spending industry globally. —

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