Health care industry sees a churn with entry of formidable newcomers

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The hospital is also the Jaypee Group's first foray into health care. Located in the heart of a 1,200-acre integrated township called Wish Town the group is building in Noida, it will start with 500 beds, increasing to 1,200 in a few years and offer all kinds of super specialties. "There are many marquee hospitals in Delhi, but none in Noida," says Gaur, explaining his decision. With an investment of Rs 2,000 crore, Jaypee Hospitals - as the hospital arm is called - is also setting up three more facilities in the nearby towns of Bulandshahr, Agra and Sahibabad. In what will be essentially a hub-and-spoke model, Jaypee plans another 40 health centres too, with 10 to 50 beds each, all of which will plug into the mother hospital at Noida.
The Jaypee initiative is part of a recent rush into private health care, with at least three formidable newcomers entering the sector. The second is IT services major HCL Corporation, which has started HCL Healthcare run by Shikhar Malhotra, HCL founder Shiv Nadar's son-in-law. HCL Healthcare is setting up a chain of 250 clinics, the first two of which have already opened in Gurgaon and Noida, under a subsidiary, HCL Avitas. If medical clinic chains are rare enough in India-most of the 100,000-odd clinics in the country are standalone units - state-of-the-art ones of the sort HCL Avitas is building are almost unheard of. "We want a network of multi-specialty clinics," says Harish Natarajan, CEO, HCL Avitas. To build the network, HCL has partnered with global health-care leader Johns Hopkins - the clinics will all be connected by video and have a common electronic health record database, so a patient's history can be accessed at any of the clinics as well as by the patient himself over his phone. Malhotra's ambition is to touch 20 million patients by 2020.
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Simultaneously, established players in the sector such as the Max Healthcare, the Fortis Group and the Apollo Group are also undergoing changes. Analjit Singh, promoter of Max Healthcare, recently stepped down from the company's board to make Rahul Khosla its Chairman. Khosla is also the managing director of the group. Singh's intent in choosing Khosla, a banker of three decades who joined Max Healthcare just three years ago, was to further 'professionalise' the company.
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Another key focus is super specialities. "In addition to traditional specialties like cardiology, we have focused on developing tertiary and quaternary specialties such as oncology, neurosciences, bariatrics, high end orthopaedics, nephrology and gastroenterology."
The Fortis Group too has ventured into a variant of telemedicine - it has been setting up eICUs. Teams of nurses go to small towns and start these units, which are connected to the mother hospitals in a manner that patients can be hospitalised and treated there, with doctors never having to physically visit them. "We started with 10 beds two years back, and now have 150 beds," says Aditya Vij, CEO, Fortis. The company's mainstay hospital business is also expanding, with a target of setting up 500 new beds every year, either at existing facilities or at new ones it will build. Among specialities, it is setting up an oncology centre at its Mohali hospital, and a mother-and-child focused one at its Ludhiana unit, called La Femme. The oldest player in the business, Apollo Hospitals too is investing Rs 1,500 crore to expand into Tier-II and III towns.
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In the earlier phase, today's established players incurred sizeable debts. Fortis, for instance, acquired the Escorts hospitals and the Wockhardt chain of hospitals, expanding its network to 66 units and making it the largest chain in the country. Fortis's Vij notes that the company has practically cleared its debts by selling off its entire international business, barring a single hospital in Singapore. "Our debt equity ratio is down to 0.2 from 1.7," he says. "Profitability was under pressure because of expansion and acquisition, but now we have built scale and profitability will be back." Apollo has 51 hospitals and Max 10.
In 2013/13, private equity money in health care has gone up 54 per cent to $2 billion a year. More players open up more avenues. In the last 10 years 80 per cent of new bed capacity was built by private players. Still, an additional 650,000 beds are required to cater to the demand, which will require a capital investment of Rs 1,62,500 crore by 2017, according to a McKinsey report.
Clearly, no one will eat into another's business. The scope for private health care is immense. New players will only help in building better infrastructure.
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