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Affordable Healthcare Comes Home

Affordable nursing at the doorstep is the new fad for many in urban India

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Affordable Healthcare Comes Home
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When S.P. Kamra (75) returned home from hospital after treatment for a stroke, his family members were worried. Completely bed-ridden in his Delhi home, Kamra needed constant and expe­rt care. As his son, Praveen, looked for optio­ns, someone suggested home care services. From monitoring Kamra’s ventilator parameters, to maintaining an input-output chart for fluid balance, chest and limb physiotherapy, to changing his body position every hour, even providing psychological support, the expert attendants from the private service provider, Health Care at Home, did everything to nurse him back to health. And his son, Praveen, could not have been happier. “With the support and the treatment, my father’s health status has improved…he has been weaned off the ventilator and his vitals are within the normal level. His neurological conditions have improved too. With physiotherapy, his lower limbs have gained back strength,” Praveen tells Outlook. “Psychological support and counselling by the attendants (also) helped him get well faster”.

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Hundreds of miles to the west, in Mumbai, the family of K. Jayakantham also faced a similar dile­mma. The 82-year-old woman was suffering from severe pneumonia besides advanced deme­ntia. Her son, K Sampath, then turned to Zoctr, another home healthcare service. “Initially, we were taking care of our mother. But later we realised that we need trained help. Zoctr provided us with two trained nurses, an ayah and a male attendant,” says Sampath. “We are very happy with their services. They know all the medical procedures and they check the parameters regularly. Most importantly they are very helpful.”

Once the domain of the neighbourhood ayaah or the even the untrained domestic help, post hospitalisation care at home is now provided by professional experts in urban areas of India, where the gap between the number of patients and hospital beds is huge. Data from the National Health Profile 2017 show that there is just one government hospital bed for every 2,046 people. One research shows that India shares more than 20 per cent of the global disease burden, it accounts for only eight per cent of doctors and six per cent of hospital beds. Private hospitals work on the ALOS (average length of stay) model—the increased availability of hospital beds translates to more surgeries and hence higher revenue. Hospitals prefer to discharge patients who are stable and use the infrastructure for surgeries and other medical procedures for critical patients.

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Experts say the demand for home healthcare services is growing exponentially due to several reasons including high hospitalisation costs, rising elderly population, need for personalised medical attention, dismantling of traditional joint family, lack of quality healthcare service network and increase of non-communicable diseases that require care, but not necessarily hospitalisation. According to an estimate by the University of Pennsylvania, the home healthcare industry in India is estimated to grow from Rs 7,800 crore in 2018 to Rs 91,000 crore by 2025.

The rising number of senior citizens—about 150 million—is also fuelling the industry. In a country with an increased movement of people globally for work, elderly parents or family members with chronic diseases are often left behind, and alone. And approximately 29.7 per cent of the elderly population suffers from depre­ssion and this is mainly because of loneliness. Swadeep Srivastava, managing partner of IVH SeniorCare says, “Loneliness and depression among the elderly population is our main concern...What patients of depression require is company, someone with whom they can enjoy some quality time. If they are living alone, their mental condition deteriorates even faster. The care managers talk to them and keep them eng­aged. They are more like buddies. They take the elderly citizens for a walk and if there is any medical requirement, they get in touch with the doctors.” Thiyagarajan Velayutham, founder and MD of India Home Health Care (IHHC) says that , home healthcare services offer many advantages including convenience, especially in a big metro where getting to and from hospital can be “difficult, time consuming and expensive”.

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Rising chronic diseases are also forcing people to look at home healthcare so that they don’t need to go through frequent hospitalisation. Nurses, doctors and attendants serve the pati­ents’ needs in their own homes, covering even complex services like setting up a temoporary ICU. Home healthcare services are also more affordable than hospital stays, operating at appro­ximately 15 per cent to 30 per cent lower cost than hospital stays (see chart). “Our solutions provide 30 to 60 per cent savings on similar hospitalisation costs. Patients choose us for our deep domain expertise in specialised areas like cancer care,” says Nidhi Saxena, founder and CEO of the Mumbai-based Zoctr Health Network. Swadeep Srivastava says his company also empl­oys ex-defence personnel, who are able to handle any kind of crisis swiftly and have high integrity. “Some people are not comfortable about a stranger coming home to take care of them. If it is a defence personal, the family members are also at peace because they know that they are in reliable hands,” he adds.

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Delhi-based geriatric specialist P.C. Rai, however, has a word of caution. “For bed-ridden patients this is an extremely good option. The problem starts when the nurses are not trained,” he says. Another doctor, who did not want to be named, also says that lack of trained and dedicated staff is a big issue in home healthcare. In case of acute medical emergencies, they are not very reliable, especially in the case of aged patients,” he says. It’s also not possible to transport sophisticated instruments for the use of just one person.

Then there are other issues. Homecare health service is yet to be brought under any regulatory authority, leaving patients without any mechanism to seek compensation in case anything goes wrong. The regulatory framework in the National Health Policy 2017 only covers hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and laboratories. Besides, home health care in India is not covered by most health insurance policies including the much-touted Ayushman Bharat Mission, launched recently by the Centre covering 100 million people in the first round. “Now the government’s main focus is on health insurance. Hence, it is high time for insurers to include home care to quickly grow and increase their scope of coverage. Insurers can provide it as a separate or add-on service to differentiate their product offerings,” says Delhi-based Anjan Bose, secretary general of Health Care Federation of India.

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For all the drawbacks, home healthcare is growing in popularity across the country. When Mumbai-based Amar Kazi (75) injured his spine after a fall, it is his caregivers at home who nursed him back to health. “I was bed-ridden and needed help to move around. My daughters have their own family responsibilities and cannot come and live with me all the time…The attendants are trained…they take care of all my needs, starting from taking me for walks, to bathing me, giving me medicines, massaging me regularly. They are like my shadow.” For many like Kazi, there is nothing like home. And care at home.

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