Though there are many health programmes in India, people do not get timely treatment and have to visit private hospitals and pay higher costs, Ashok Arbat, chairman and managing director of Nagpur-based KRIMS Hospital, said here at the 'Connected Health and Disruptive Technology Summit 2017'.
He underlined the need to build indigenous technology and increase research in the healthcare sector in India.
"We need technology to make healthcare cheaper for average man in the country. But research is not progressing in India, especially for medicine. We need funding for research programmes to support technologies," he said.
Indian doctors are exploring new digital technologies to cater to the needs of tech-savvy youngsters and girls aged 15 years when most of them drop out of school and are married off to start a family life, said Hema Divakar, former president of Federation of Obstetric and Gynaecologists of India.
Indian doctors need to increase the use of digital technologies and telemedicine to reach out to youngsters, said Divakar, whose Divakar's Speciality Hospital received Icon of Healthcare Awards from Singapore-based Business Excellence and Research Group.
Sreejoy Patnaik, the chairman of the 120-bed Shanti Omni Super Speciality Hospital in Odisha, told PTI that "The cost of medical services in India is lower than Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia and Sri Lanka".
"We can form a network with dispensaries across Odisha for use of such systems as part of our telemedicine offering in the future," he said.
The awards, supported by healthcare groups including Napier and industry specific consultants PwC, recognised expertise of Indian doctors including H M Prasanna of Prestine Hospital in Bengaluru and Chandandeep Sandhu of Mohali.
Other award winners in the list of Asian hospitals and medical experts were R Padmakumar of Kochi, Hiren Parikh of Baroda, Manish Khaitan and Dhaval Naik of Ahmedabad, and Indus Healthcare of Punjab and Murli Krishna Pharma of Pune.
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