Medgate Today

Pandemic Effect

India Pushes Forward to Upgrade Critical Care Health Infrastruc­ture and Adoption of World Class Medical Technology

-

The COVID-19 induced pandemic revealed major creaks in healthcare systems across the globe. In India, the void of a limited number of hospitals, debilitati­ng medical infrastruc­ture and restricted access to healthcare was felt the strongest for 72 years of the country’s independen­ce. As state and central government­s recognized the gaps, it can be sufficient­ly said that the pandemic completely changed the dynamics of the Indian healthcare ecosystem for years to come. Ventilator­s and PPE kits became the face of the pandemic as the country scrambled to provide critical healthcare to its citizens. According to data from the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy and Princeton University, India had only 48,000 ventilator­s at the time of the pandemic's outbreak against the requiremen­t for 1,50,000 ventilator­s. This scenario now is undergoing a major change and at a rapid pace.

Earlier availabili­ty of such advanced ventilator­s in tier-2 towns were unheard of, making critical care infrastruc­ture limited to metros. Philips, a global leader in health technology, recently introduced its mobile Intensive Care Units (ICUs) for India

In the 2021 Union Budget of India, the government announced a 137% increase in healthcare spends, with the goal to address the long pending need to grow more on health as a percentage of the GDP. This additional spend is envisaged to go towards all round upliftment, from vaccinatio­n, to preventive health and to augment the national medical infrastruc­ture with specific focus on critical care.

Already, some progress has been made. Through the pandemic period, India progressiv­ely saw growth in the number

A number of domestic manufactur­ers like Bharat Electronic­s Limited (in collaborat­ion Skanray Technologi­es), AgVa Healthcare (in collaborat­ion with Maruti Suzuki Limited), MedTech Zone, Mahindra & Mahindra, Hyundai Motor India Ltd, have successful­ly manufactur­ed and delivered ventilator­s to meet the need gap. At the same time many global players came with world class medical technology. Brands like Hamilton Medical, GE Healthcare supplied cutting edge ventilator­s to various health care facilities during these times. Hamilton Medical, a specialist ventilator brand from Switzerlan­d and a world leader in ventilator technology is in the process of installing a batch of 1500 ventilator­s across central government run hospitals, which include the AIIMS in Gorakhpur, Bhatinda, Raebareli and Nagpur as well as many government hospitals in tier 2 towns such as Tripura, Dimapur, Dibrugarh, Imphal, Silchar and others.

of ICU beds, number of ventilator­s and oxygenated beds. As per the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare in April 2020, India's ICU bed count stood at 27,360. By January 2021, this had increased to 36,008. The country's oxygenated bed count rose by over 152% in the same period. The Central government procured a total of 38,867 ventilator­s at a cost of Rs 1,850.76 crore for distributi­ng among the States and the Union Territorie­s. Dr. Debendra Kumar Tripathy, Additional professor (Dept of Anesthesio­logy and Critical Care) and Vice Dean (Innovation) at AIIMS, Rishikesh says, “In the pre-Covid era India was severely lacking ventilator­s, monitors and trained manpower to run critical care facilities. This pandemic has been able to draw the attention of healthcare policymake­rs towards the need for more intensive care units. Many states have today grown

their ICU infrastruc­ture 2 to 3-fold and in cases even 5 to 7 fold. Even district headquarte­rs have better infrastruc­ture and trained manpower today. At AIIMS Rishikesh we expanded the critical care capacity from just one ICU to now 7 ICU's during the pandemic. Today, after the reduction in pandemic related patient load these ICUs are being utilized to provide tertiary care to routine patients.” The pandemic set forth a global crisis for the critical care manufactur­ing sector. There was global shortage of ventilator­s as countries scrambled to upgrade their healthcare infrastruc­ture. The disruption created by the pandemic in the global supply chain added to this challenge. Due to the worldwide spread of coronaviru­s, exports of medical equipment including ventilator­s came to a halt. The situation was so taxing that as many as fiftyfour countries stopped exporting medical

goods including ventilator­s. Speaking on the importance of delivering critical care support to critical patients, Dr. Vasudevan, HoD JIPMER, Puducherry said, “We had a good infrastruc­ture in place until the pandemic struck. Suddenly, ventilator­s became crucial equipment to maintain patients' conditions. We had to ramp up our facilities and we received ventilator­s under PM cares program. These were both home-grown and some from internatio­nal companies. However, to run this equipment is a challenge and some of these especially the imported ventilator­s were based on Artificial Intelligen­ce and automated functionin­g. This made it easy for us to monitor patients.”

COVID-19 in essence proved to be a disruptor of India's healthcare sector by pushing it for its much-needed crucial upgrades and pivotal implementa­tion. The progress of Critical care infrastruc­ture is now not only taking place in metro cities but also expanding to 2-3 tier cities. However, with that came the challenge of finding trained healthcare profession­als to manage and operate many ventilator­s at a time. That is where advanced technologi­cal interventi­ons and expertise in manufactur­ing becomes pivotal. The onus now lies in ensuring effective critical care management and infrastruc­ture is present in every scale of government, public and private healthcare setups. India needs to move beyond minting doctors and building hospitals. It is essential that doctors and hospitals are equipped to deliver healthcare using advanced tools.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India