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New Amrita Hospital is all set to open in Faridabad in August this year; 2,400-bed facility will become India’s biggest private hospital

avenuepark57

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The ultra-modern Amrita Hospital at Faridabad would be one of India’s largest green-building healthcare projects with a low carbon footprint, the hospital management said. (FE.com)

Amrita Hospitals announced on Thursday that its new 2,400-bed campus will soon be open to the public in Faridabad in August this year. During the press conference on Thursday, hospital management announced that the new Amrita Hospital is spread across 133 acres of land in Faridabad and it will be the biggest private sector hospital in India.

This would be the second large-scale Amrita Hospital in India after the iconic 1,200-bed Amrita Hospital in Kochi, Kerala, which was established 25 years ago by the Mata Amritanandamayi Math.

The new hospital is located at Sector 88, Faridabad and it will have a total built-up area of 1 crore sq. ft., including a 14-floor-high tower that will encompass the key medical facilities and patient areas. During the press conference, Swami Nijamritananda Puri, Head, Mata Amritanandamayi Math, Delhi announced that the 81 specialties at the hospital will include eight centers of excellence, such as oncology, cardiac sciences, neurosciences, gastro-sciences, renal sciences, bone diseases and trauma, transplants, and mother and child.

The hospital will become operational in stages, with 500 beds opening in August this year. In two years, this number will rise to 750 beds, and further to 1,000 beds in five years. When fully operational, the hospital will have a staff of 10,000 people, including over 800 doctors.

On how the new hospital has incorporated the aspects of pandemic-induced demands, Dr. Sanjeev K Singh, Medical Director, Amrita Hospital, Faridabad told Financial Express.com: “We have learned a lot from the pandemic. The construction of the hospital began 5-6 years ago and the learnings from the pandemic also got incorporated along the way. For example, any patient who comes in an emergency gets facilitated in a 40-bed setup. In that set-up, we have a decontaminated area in which anyone who needs to shower will be sent there. We have four negative pressure rooms and if we have any suspected cases of covid or covid-like diseases we can send them to concerned specialists. The mechanism of shifting is also planned and implemented. In all critical care units, there are positive pressure isolation rooms.”

The massive facility will also include 534 critical care beds which is the highest in India, the hospital management claims. The hospital campus will also include 64 modular operation theaters, most advanced imaging services, fully automated robotic laboratory, high-precision radiation oncology, most updated nuclear medicine, and state-of-the-art 9 cardiac and interventional cath lab for clinical services. Cutting-edge medical research will be a strong thrust area, with a dedicated research block spread across a 7-floor building totaling 3 lakh sq. ft with exclusive Grade A to D GMP lab with focus on identifying newer diagnostic markers, AI, ML, Bioinformatics etc.

Dr. Singh also told Financial Express.com that they want to integrate all aspects of medical science and bridge the gap between clinicians and scientists.

"In Kochi, we have established tissue engineering, a nano-medicine-based cardiac stent, bone growth, and lots more. What we are looking at Faridabad campus is developing something new in stem-cell therapies. We want to create techniques like creating human cells on our own in our GMP labs as generally, we rely on international counterparts for such procedures. Recently, we conducted research in which we found that we can use patient pluripetin stem cells in tumours and it will destroy them. For us, oncology is the big thrust area but other areas will be a focus too. The intent of our research facility will be to make the high-end expensive equipment and treatments cost-effective for the common man. We want to integrate medicine, engineering, biotechnology, and other segments altogether,” Dr. Singh told Financial Express.com.

Dr. Singh also said that they have already been awarded the Advanced ICMR Clinical Trial Unit and this will enable them to conduct their trials in the new facility.

“Mata Amritanandamayi has allocated a certain amount of seed money to initiate research. On the basis of submitted proposals, things will materialise and start,” he added.

Dr. Singh also told Financial Express.com that the new hospital will also be empaneled. “There is a process of 3-6 months and then after medical facilities will be available under all panels like ECHS, CGHS and other TPAs,” he added.

During the press conference, Dr Singh also informed that the hospital will be among the very few facilities in the country to conduct hand transplants, a specialty pioneered by Amrita Hospital in Kochi. “We will also do transplants of liver, kidney, trachea, vocal cords, intestine, heart, lung, pancreas, skin, bone, face and bone marrow,” he said.

"Training of medical students and doctors will be a strong focus area. The hospital will have state-of-the-art robotics, haptic, surgical-medical simulation centre spread across 4 floors and 1.5 lakh sq. ft area, the biggest such learning & development facility for doctors in the country. The facility will also host a medical college and the country’s biggest allied health sciences campus,” he stated.

Moreover, the management also informed that ultra-modern Amrita Hospital at Faridabad would be one of India’s largest green-building healthcare projects with a low carbon footprint. “It is an end-to-end paperless facility, with zero waste discharge.

“There is also a helipad on the campus for swift transport of patients and a 498-room guest house where attendants accompanying the patients can stay,” they said

 
Woh sabh theek hai, Mr. @avenuepark57, tell me if penniless beggars suffering with cancer on the street and debt-ridden middle classees will be treated free of cost by Mata Amritanandamayi. Will anyone coming to this hospital be treated free of cost ?
 
Woh sabh theek hai, Mr. @avenuepark57, tell me if penniless beggars suffering with cancer on the street and debt-ridden middle classees will be treated free of cost by Mata Amritanandamayi. Will anyone coming to this hospital be treated free of cost ?
It is the duty of govt. to provide that free service. Private institutions do have moral obligations but you can't impose them.
 
It is the duty of govt. to provide that free service. Private institutions do have moral obligations but you can't impose them.

I agree it is the duty of the governance system to provide free healthcare to all non-criminal citizens without question but a proper governance system when it takes over the governance of a society will also take over the previous healthcare system - every clinic, every hospital, everything attached to them - and make their service free for the citizens. This means there will be no private clinic and hospital that will treat someone only when that person will pay money because healthcare in exchange of money is extortion.

How is it not irrational and not criminal that a person is suffering or dying but a hospital refuses to treat him or her unless the patient pays money ? Such a hospital and the governance system that enables this criminality has no right to exist. But TII - This Is India - so these things happen :

So many Indians died in the COVID second wave last year because they didn't have the money to obtain medicines, oxygen cylinders and home oxygen generators and that too from the illegal market. Or people died of COVID because they couldn't obtain the money in time. More than four million died of COVID in India but Pragati Purush Narendra bhai was busy building his new PM palace and turning up at the construction site in the night to show to his adoring janata that Modi Never Sleeps, He Is Always At Work. I leave you with my dedication to Pragati Purush :
 
I agree it is the duty of the governance system to provide free healthcare to all non-criminal citizens without question but a proper governance system when it takes over the governance of a society will also take over the previous healthcare system - every clinic, every hospital, everything attached to them - and make their service free for the citizens. This means there will be no private clinic and hospital that will treat someone only when that person will pay money because healthcare in exchange of money is extortion.

How is it not irrational and not criminal that a person is suffering or dying but a hospital refuses to treat him or her unless the patient pays money ? Such a hospital and the governance system that enables this criminality has no right to exist. But TII - This Is India - so these things happen :

So many Indians died in the COVID second wave last year because they didn't have the money to obtain medicines, oxygen cylinders and home oxygen generators and that too from the illegal market. Or people died of COVID because they couldn't obtain the money in time. More than four million died of COVID in India but Pragati Purush Narendra bhai was busy building his new PM palace and turning up at the construction site in the night to show to his adoring janata that Modi Never Sleeps, He Is Always At Work. I leave you with my dedication to Pragati Purush :
I am not a socialist by any means but to run a system like that requires massive budget. If the govt can afford that I will endorse it wholeheartedly.
 
I am not a socialist by any means but to run a system like that requires massive budget. If the govt can afford that I will endorse it wholeheartedly.

Nice to hear that you will endorse it if you see the validity of it. :tup:

1. If little ( and poor, Capitalism-wise ) Cuba could do it, if mid-sized Libyan Jamahiriya could do it, if massive USSR could do it then so can India which is "the 6th largest economy in the world". It is not a matter of budget or money but of intention of the governance system and allocation of resources ( human, material and financial ). But India's governance system is more interested in maintaining a huge military and building religion-linked statues and other castles in the air but is not interested in looking after the health of its own citizens. Was buying a single Israeli missile more important than enabling the recovery of that journalist and those two babies who died because of lack of money with them ?

2. According to this google search India earned 474.15 billion dollars from exports for 2020. Isn't this enough to run a free healthcare system, if at all it requires this much money ?

3. Just enable a progressive socio-economic system where the healthcare personnel have their material needs met without them demanding money from the patients and where the patients can get cured without the need for them to produce money to give to the healthcare personnel. Other "Communist" and Socialist societies had their own progressive socio-economic systems and in this thread I have proposed my veryt simple system where the overall objectives are to make basic human needs free ( things like housing, water, basic food etc, healthcare etc ) and for non-basic needs there is a evolved money system which enables abolishment of the traditional Capitalist socio-economic classes ( rich, middle, poor ) and allows every citizen to potentially be able to access all the goods and services in the society on equal basis.

I am logging-off so will reply tomorrow to any points or questions you have.
 
Nice to hear that you will endorse it if you see the validity of it. :tup:

1. If little ( and poor, Capitalism-wise ) Cuba could do it, if mid-sized Libyan Jamahiriya could do it, if massive USSR could do it then so can India which is "the 6th largest economy in the world". It is not a matter of budget or money but of intention of the governance system and allocation of resources ( human, material and financial ). But India's governance system is more interested in maintaining a huge military and building religion-linked statues and other castles in the air but is not interested in looking after the health of its own citizens. Was buying a single Israeli missile more important than enabling the recovery of that journalist and those two babies who died because of lack of money with them ?

2. According to this google search India earned 474.15 billion dollars from exports for 2020. Isn't this enough to run a free healthcare system, if at all it requires this much money ?

3. Just enable a progressive socio-economic system where the healthcare personnel have their material needs met without them demanding money from the patients and where the patients can get cured without the need for them to produce money to give to the healthcare personnel. Other "Communist" and Socialist societies had their own progressive socio-economic systems and in this thread I have proposed my veryt simple system where the overall objectives are to make basic human needs free ( things like housing, water, basic food etc, healthcare etc ) and for non-basic needs there is a evolved money system which enables abolishment of the traditional Capitalist socio-economic classes ( rich, middle, poor ) and allows every citizen to potentially be able to access all the goods and services in the society on equal basis.

I am logging-off so will reply tomorrow to any points or questions you have.

Huh? How old are you bro, that is a hilarious post, especially point 2. You think that 474 billion dollars is cash going to the government? That is the total money earned from exports of all sorts of things - agriculture goods, pharmaceuticals, automobiles, it is all going to private companies who made those products, the middlemen, traders, exporters etc who use it to pay salaries, cost of raw material etc. The real estimate of what is going to the govt is the profit on those 474 billion times the tax - at best maybe like 10 billion considering that so many people in India avoid taxes.

When you take the current size of the GDP, take into account that less than 5% of the population pays any tax and then take into account other expenditures- education, infrastructure, military(most of it going to pay salaries to generate employment) etc etc and then take into account the population of 1.4 billion, then you will realize that it is not possible in the next 100 years also to have free healthcare. Can't compare a country like cuba with a tiny population or an oil rich nation like Libya to a massive poor country like India. In any case, it seems you have never been to Cuba. Well I have, more than 3 times for vacation and they don't even have simple medicines like paracetamol in stock. The entiire country's population survives on stipends sent by cubans living in florida and other parts of North and South America. Yes, there is free healthcare in cuba, but very very shity. There is no pont having something for free if it's shit. Medical infra over there is crumbling and non existent. Cuban style of free healthcare is even possible in Somalia

Even if we had enough money, to think that free healthcare can function in a country like India means you have never lived in India and totally devoid of realities. Anything that is "free" in India will be subject to rampant corruption. Every year, there will be tens of millions of "ghost" patients who supposedly get treated and all the money going to politicians. Even those who get treated, something like treating a simple fracture might be written down and recorded as chemotherapy or neurosurgery, so that the govt has to pay the hospital 10 lakh instead of 1000, the posibilties of corruption are endless. Indians need to become 100 times more honest and civilized and India needs to be a developed country and with a functioning court system that deliver quick justice for corruption before even dreaming of free healthcare, right now its a poor country with jungle rule(and always has been).
 
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Healthcare is becoming very expensive in India. Only a few Christian run institutions like St John's Hospital in Bangalore provide affordable services in a professional and clean environment on a large scale. Trusts affiliated to Hindu holy people tend to open fancy hospitals for the rich. I wish they would do more for the community with all the wealth they have. I am not suggesting they should do charity, but lowering fees is possible.
 
Healthcare is becoming very expensive in India. Only a few Christian run institutions like St John's Hospital in Bangalore provide affordable services in a professional and clean environment on a large scale. Trusts affiliated to Hindu holy people tend to open fancy hospitals for the rich. I wish they would do more for the community with all the wealth they have. I am not suggesting they should do charity, but lowering fees is possible.
Government employees are being charged ₹800 for consulting a physician, don’t know how much they’ll charge a non-sarkari employee…
 
Government employees are being charged ₹800 for consulting a physician, don’t know how much they’ll charge a non-sarkari employee…
That is quite a lot, though 500 has become sort of lower limit these days. What kills is not so much the consultation charges, but the tests they invariably recommend after that. We recently got a test done for my wife in a private hospital and it was quoted at Rs 10,000. When I checked for the same test in Practo, another place was doing it for 7500. When I showed it to the hospital, they too agreed to reduce it 8000. I was shocked at this commercial-negotiation attitude, as if we are buying wholesale cloth in some tier 3 town
 
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