CHANGING TRENDS IN THE HEALTHCARE SECTOR IN INDIADr. Hiral Sheth
By Manish Prakash, Country General Manager-Public Sector, Health and Education, Microsoft India With the COVID-19 pandemic, we are grappling with the biggest crisis our generation has faced. Across the world, as we have scrambled to keep our families and communities safe and healthy, the ...
Sashi Kumar, Head of Sales, Indeed Indianoted, “As India’s healthcare sector continues to grow, so are the opportunities for jobseekers in this field. Driven by factors such as increasing healthcare needs, rising incomes, and government initiatives, the healthcare ecosystem has seen tremendous...
In a competitive, highly regulated sector, the focus on digital health, cybersecurity, patient data transparency, and more, is growing. We help you build solutions that address the healthcare sector’s core issues, and help you stay ahead of the competitive curve. Health and social care Grou...
For companies in India’s increasingly turbulent health sector, it’s time to pick up a blank sheet of paper and build a future state—now. Karan Singh is head, Asia-Pacific healthcare practice, Bain & Co, and based in New Delhi. Paul Cichocki and Molly Kerr are partners in Bain & Co...
HRM innovations in rapid growth contexts: the healthcare sector in India, 2014. The International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25:10, 1505-1525, DOI: 10.1080/09585192.2013.870308Srinivasan, V., & Chandwani, R. (2014). HRM innovations in rapid growth context...
India's healthcare market is very different than Western markets, but offers rapid growth for companies that can avoid common pitfalls.
Healthcare sector in India has seen a tremendous growth in the past years in terms of technological advancement and improved quality of services. With advancement in technology and improvement in medical processes, the experience of a patient right from the registration to the discharge formalities ha...
The rising dependency on digital technology has not only makes a transformation in the industrial sector but also strikes the medical sector in the economy. The hospital is moving a step forward to adopt new marketing solutions for increasing their online presence so that consumers would get the ...
But a range of industry-level actors, private organisations and public insurers are involved too, promoting their own interests in the sector via the offices of regulatory capitalism: accreditation companies, insurers, platform operators and consumer courts. Rules and norms are extensive but diffuse. ...