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India a global leader in health innovation and vaccines: Jitendra

India a global leader in health innovation and vaccines: Jitendra

Time of India9 hours ago

NEW DELHI: Underscoring India's evolution into a global health leader, Jitendra Singh, junior minister for science & technology and earth sciences, said India was now recognised globally as a leader in healthcare innovation, pharmaceutical manufacturing and vaccine development, exporting vaccines to over 100 countries under Vaccine Maitri.
"As we move forward, such partnerships will be key in shaping the future of global health from India," he said at the Times Now Doctors Day Conclave 2025, powered by Lupin.
Junior minister for health and family welfare Anupriya Patel laid out the Centre's ambitious vision for India@100 and said, "We are committed to creating a resilient, inclusive and technology-driven healthcare ecosystem by 2047, as we celebrate 100 years of independence.
Our vision is to ensure accessible and affordable healthcare for every citizen. The National Health Policy embodies this vision, shifting the focus from disease-specific interventions to a comprehensive and integrated approach rooted in universal health coverage.
This is a paradigm shift - one that redefines how we view health and well-being, not just within India but also in alignment with global priorities."
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Others who spoke at the event included Punjab governor and Chandigarh administrator Gulab Chand Kataria, Tripura governor Indrasena Reddy Nallu and Andhra Pradesh health minister Satya Kumar Yadav.
Kataria said since 2014, India's healthcare budget had grown from Rs 33,000 crore to Rs 99,000 crore, reflecting the govt's strong commitment to a Swasth Bharat under the leadership of PM Narenrda Modi.
Nallu spoke about transforming access to affordable healthcare by scaling telemedicine services across the nation. TNN

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Harvard University expert reveals top 10 drinks that boost liver health and what you should avoid
Harvard University expert reveals top 10 drinks that boost liver health and what you should avoid

Time of India

time24 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Harvard University expert reveals top 10 drinks that boost liver health and what you should avoid

Source: Instagram When it comes to keeping your liver healthy, your drink choices may matter just as much as your meals. Dr. Saurabh Sethi, a Harvard and Stanford-trained gastroenterologist, recently shared a viral video on Instagram breaking down how ten everyday beverages affect liver health. From hydrating water to sugar-loaded fruit juices, he rated each drink on a scale of 1 to 10 based on its potential to help or harm the liver. Whether you're aiming to boost liver function or avoid common dietary pitfalls, Dr. Sethi's insights offer a science-backed guide to making smarter beverage choices. Harvard expert Dr Sethi reveals: Top drinks to boost liver health Dr. Saurabh Sethi recently turned to Instagram to share his professional opinion on a common question: Which beverages promote liver health, and which quietly damage it? In a video he uploaded on June 28, Dr. Sethi rated 10 popular drinks on the basis of how good—or bad—they are for the liver, rating them from 1 to 10, with 10 being the most healthy choice. His observations provide a ready guide for anyone attempting to enhance liver function through daily drink options. Top healthy drinks ranked for liver health: What to drink and what to avoid Here's how Dr. Sethi ranked these beverages: Drink Score (Out of 10) Liver Health Impact Store-bought fruit juice 1/10 High in added sugars and preservatives; may increase risk of fatty liver and metabolic syndrome. Sweetened tea 2/10 Filled with sugar; causes inflammation and liver stress. Fresh fruit juice 4/10 Natural but high in fructose; can overload the liver if consumed in excess. Green smoothies 5/10 Nutrient-rich, especially with leafy greens, but added fruits or sugars reduce liver benefits. Lemon water 6/10 Mildly detoxifying and hydrating; more beneficial for hydration than direct liver healing. Beetroot juice 7/10 High in nitrates and antioxidants; helps reduce liver inflammation and supports detoxification. Unsweetened vegetable juice 8/10 Low in sugar, rich in vitamins and minerals that support liver health. Black coffee 9/10 Proven to reduce risk of liver disease and fibrosis when consumed without sugar or cream. Water 10/10 Essential for hydration, toxin removal, and overall liver function. Why liver health starts with what you drink Dr. Sethi is keen to point out the liver's role in cleansing the body and metabolizing nutrients. Due to this, what we consume on a daily basis has the potential to assist or overload this remarkable organ. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Perdagangkan CFD Emas dengan Broker Tepercaya IC Markets Mendaftar Undo "Some beverages often thought to be healthy might end up harming more than helping," he added in his video. Rankings were drawn from scientific reports, clinical observation, and the nutritional effect of each beverage. 'One popular 'healthy' drink actually does more harm than good,' Dr. Sethi warned, urging followers to watch until the end to discover the best and worst beverages for liver health. Why black coffee and water top the list for liver health, according to Dr Sethi Dr. Sethi pointed to black coffee and water as the winners when it comes to maintaining liver health. Coffee, specifically, has been linked to decreased levels of liver enzymes and lessened inflammation. In the meantime, water is the ultimate detoxifier, assisting the liver in filtering out waste and ensuring healthy cell function. At the opposite end of the list are those store-bought fruit drinks and sugary teas because they contain a lot of sugar and no fiber, the components that help create fatty liver disease and insulin resistance. Watch out for "healthy" drinks that may not be so healthy The most surprising insight from Dr. Sethi's list? Even freshly squeezed juice, often seen as a health staple, scored just 4 out of 10 due to its high fructose content and lack of fiber. This reveals the importance of understanding how ingredients interact with liver function, especially when consumed regularly. To have the best liver health, it's not only a matter of what we eat—but also what we drink. Dr. Sethi's ranking of drinks is a handy guide for making healthier, liver-friendly choices in your everyday life. If unsure, pick water, black coffee, or vegetable-based beverages, and avoid sweetened or processed varieties. Also Read | Shocking Warning! Bread, potatoes, and cereal may contain cadmium linked to cancer, high BP, and other risks especially for children

Big money is making a beeline for Indian hospitals
Big money is making a beeline for Indian hospitals

Economic Times

time34 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Big money is making a beeline for Indian hospitals

Indian hospitals are the new goldmine for deep pockets. Besides a rush of investment, a high-intensity consolidation is ongoing in India's hospital space. As per an ET report based on information from sources, IPO-bound Manipal Health Enterprises is leading the race to acquire Sahyadri Hospitals with a Rs 6,838 crore ($800 million) bid. Global investment firm Blackstone is a close second, sources said. IHH Healthcare-backed Fortis Healthcare and EQT Partners also submitted bids on June 23, which was the last day to submit binding financial bids. ADVERTISEMENT Also Read: Manipal Health Enterprises leads race to buy Sahyadri Hospitals The Pune-headquartered hospital chain, which operates 11 facilities across Pune, Nashik, Ahilya Nagar and Karad, comprising 1,300 beds, 2,500 clinicians and 3,500 support staff, is owned by Canada's pension fund Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (OTPP), which had acquired Sahyadri from Everstone Capital in August 2022 at a valuation of around Rs 2,500 crore, outbidding Max Healthcare. Everstone had bought the hospital chain three years earlier in 2019 from its founder, neurosurgeon Charudutt Apte, for about Rs 1,000 crore. The big money chasing Sahyadri for past several years is emblematic of the attraction Indian hospitals, especially smaller chains, have come to hold in recent times. Bulge-bracket private equity funds are increasingly investing in single-specialty Indian hospital chains that present a robust growth potential in emerging consuming centers, significantly widening the addressable market beyond their traditional metropolitan bailiwicks, ET had reported in locations, such as Lucknow , Vizag, Jaipur, Cochin, Siliguri, Guwahati, Bhubaneswar and Patna, private equity investors believe, hold great growth potential in healthcare, in lockstep with an increasing affordability quotient in tier- 2 or 3 towns, and a greater availability of qualified doctors and specialists. PE funds are looking for players that will give higher returns - and blockbuster exits when the investments run their course. ADVERTISEMENT 'A trifecta of factors is helping accelerate investor interest in the single specialty healthcare chains including significant growth opportunity in tier 2/3 cities, clearly visible unit economics and viability with best in class ROIs,' Vishal Bali, executive chairman, Asia Healthcare Holdings (AHH), a leading healthcare investment platform, with focus on single specialities like oncology, women and child care, fertility, urology and nephrology, had told ET. 'AHH has been the inflection point for Single speciality healthcare with all our companies in single speciality healthcare delivering consistent growth in revenues, ebitda and geographical reach along with ROIs' he PE monies in treatment areas such as IVF, nephrology, eye-care, oncology, mother & childcare among others, have become a credible prescription for future value creation, after nearly a decade-long hunt for multi-speciality assets across the country. According to an analysis done by Avendus, single-speciality hospitals account for over 40% of all PE investments in healthcare since 2019. This was just a bit over 15% between 2015 and 2018. Between 2020 and early 2025, the segment recorded 24 PE/VC investments totalling $1.8 billion, with 19 of those deals worth $1.2 billion closing in the last two years alone, shows data put together by Grant Thornton. ADVERTISEMENT Over the period of two years from 2022-24 Hospitals in India have become one of the preferred investment destination for Investors, attracting net investment of $4.96 billion from Private Equity and $3.2 billion through Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). ADVERTISEMENT As per a report prepared by consultancy firm Grant Thornton Bharat in collaboration with the Association of Healthcare providers of India (AHPI), from 2022-24 hospitals in India undertook M&A deals worth $6.74 billion and attracted $4.96 billion from Private Equity (PE) investors. During the period, hospitals also raised $466 million through Initial Public Offering (IPO). The report which analysed 594 M&A and private equity transactions that took place during the period states that, 'Hospitals require diverse funding solutions to sustain growth, ranging from equity financing, debt financing, and foreign direct investment (FDI) to public-private partnerships (PPPs).' As per the investment analysis, the top three investment via PE route includes: Temasek Holdings $2 billion investment in Manipal Health (2023); $656 million by BPEA EQT in Indira IVF (2023); and lastly Blackstone Group $591.1 million investment in Quality Care (2023). A recent big deal was by a New York-based global private-equity and investment company, KKR, which in February bought a controlling stake in leading cancer care hospital chain Healthcare Global (HCG) from private equity peer CVC Capital Partners for nearly $400 million. By acquiring Baby Memorial Hospital last year, KKR made a comeback to the sector after one of its biggest paydays in India exiting Max Healthcare two years ago. ADVERTISEMENT Deal-making in India's healthcare sector has surged in recent years, with hospitals now commanding the largest share of foreign direct investment (FDI) within the sector, TOI had reported in December. In FY24, hospitals accounted for 50% of the FDI in total healthcare, translating to $1.5 billion. This marks a significant increase, as the share of hospitals in healthcare FDI has more than doubled from 24% in FY21, and has been rising from 43% in FY20, underscoring their growing prominence. The trend also reflects a strengthening investor preference for hospitals, alongside the traditionally favoured pharmaceuticals strong private equity interest in India's healthcare services companies is a highly credible indicator of the multi-decade growth potential inherent in the sector, as per a top executive at European investment bank Rothschild & Co. "We expect to see expansion of interest as international players evaluate the market and get more comfortable with the domestic landscape," Hedley Goldberg, partner and global head of healthcare services at Rothschild & Co, told ET in an interview in January. Besides a number of private equity deals, the hospital sector is also attracting big Indian businesses. While several corporates such as Tata, Birla and Hinduja have a presence in healthcare, none has made a significant pan-India presence. But the Bajaj Group is preparing to enter the healthcare sector by setting up a chain of hospitals in metros across the country., ET had reported last year. As per Bloomberg, it has earmarked Rs 10,000 crore as an initial investment. In recent years, healthcare companies and hospitals in India have been increasingly focussing on acquiring buildings and properties to expand their operations and strengthen their market presence. This trend is driven by the rising demand for quality healthcare services in urban and semi-urban areas, fuelled by a growing population, increasing health awareness and better insurance coverage. In December last year, billionaire Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries acquired technology-driven and oncology-focused healthcare platform Karkinos for Rs 375 crore. Reliance bought it under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). The healthcare sector, particularly hospitals, witnessed major expansion during the Covid-19 pandemic. However, after the situation eased, it became difficult for many standalone hospitals to sustain their businesses. Such hospitals have been seeing interest from two sets of bidders — those already in the industry and seeking to expand and those who want to turn around such entities before they sell to someone else. Promoter-driven strategic investment firms and hospital operators are scouting for stressed healthcare assets that they can acquire through the insolvency and bankruptcy process, as private equity firms often edge them out in the race for good assets by offering lofty the pharmaceuticals sector, including APIs (active pharmaceutical ingredients), has been the investor favourite, attracting multi-billion-dollar deals. However, post-Covid, the hospital and diagnostics sector has come into the spotlight, drawing a wave of investors. The Indian hospital sector market cap surged 9x from Rs 37,500 crore in FY20 to Rs 3.5 lakh crore, brokerage firm JM Financial said last year in July. At a time when the sector was grappling with inefficiencies, high leverage and low ROCEs, Covid provided a much-needed impetus. This came from improved pricing, higher insurance coverage and dedicated shift towards complex surgeries such as transplants. India's top listed hospital chains performed well in the stock market leading up to this year. Apollo Hospitals' shares climbed 28% in 2024, while Max Healthcare Institute Ltd. soared 64%. The Indian hospital industry is poised to post a healthy compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of about 12% over the next three fiscal years, credit rating agency CareEdge Ratings said last year. Growing incidence of lifestyle diseases and easing demand for affordable health care delivery are driving the healthcare market in India. A report released last year by HSBC Global Research on India hospitals said seven listed hospitals will add 14,000 beds in the next 3-5 years. A total of 22,000 new beds is expected, including those by other private hospital chains. Even with these additions, there will be no over-supply of beds in India. The report said that the addition of beds is triple the number of beds added between FY19-24 at 4,000. Most hospitals are now in a consolidation phase and planning to expand and add sees growth opportunities after making profits between FY19-24 because of low capex. A World Health Organisation (WHO) report said last year that India has only 16 beds per 10,000 people, which is abysmally low if compared with most of the developed and emerging markets. India requires 100,000 additional beds in the next 5-7 years just to meet its healthcare demand on the back of increasing non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, cardiac disorders, and cancer., as per the HSBC report. The government's push to turn India into a global healthcare hub by promoting medical tourism is another strong growth driver for the hospital sector.

What is the ‘centenarian decathlon'? Longevity expert shares the blueprint that goes beyond just living long
What is the ‘centenarian decathlon'? Longevity expert shares the blueprint that goes beyond just living long

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

What is the ‘centenarian decathlon'? Longevity expert shares the blueprint that goes beyond just living long

Speaking at the New York Times Well Festival, longevity expert Dr. Peter Attia introduced a groundbreaking approach to aging that shifts the focus from lifespan to health span—the years spent living not just longer, but better. According to a report from the New York Post, his concept challenges the way we think about old age, advocating a proactive strategy to stay physically functional and mentally sharp in our most vulnerable decade. At the heart of Attia's philosophy is the notion of the 'marginal decade' — the final ten years of your life. While you won't know when it begins, you'll definitely feel it once you're in it. The key, he says, is to start preparing now. 'You don't really know the day you enter that marginal decade,' Attia remarked at the event. 'But most people know it when they're really into it.' The Centenarian Decathlon: Not What It Sounds Like In what he calls the centenarian decathlon — a term he admits is 'neither a decathlon nor exclusively for centenarians' — Attia invites individuals to curate a list of 10 physical activities they want to be able to do with ease in old age. Think of it as your personal Olympics , tailored to your life goals. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Play War Thunder now for free War Thunder Play Now Undo Want to sit cross-legged on the floor with your grandkids or take your dog on a peaceful 30-minute walk? Now's the time to train. Attia warns that many of these seemingly simple activities can become difficult — or impossible — without deliberate conditioning. His prescriptions are straightforward but revealing: practice getting off the floor with just one arm, deadlift 30 pounds to simulate lifting a child, or walk 10,000 steps daily to maintain endurance. Planning an international trip in your 80s? Try lifting a 20-pound suitcase and climbing 30 stairs without needing a break. You Might Also Like: Longevity expert Bryan Johnson has a health warning for MrBeast: 'Be sure to...' Functional Fitness for the Future The brilliance of the centenarian decathlon lies in its flexibility. Your decathlon could include dancing, swimming, cooking, or even intimacy — all of which require a mix of physical and cognitive strength. 'To be able to dance is actually a very complicated physical and cognitive task as you age,' Attia emphasized, breaking down taboos around what counts as real exercise. His own goals include standing up unassisted, playing with children, driving a race car, and using a bow and arrow — each serving as metaphors for independence and personal joy. Beyond Muscles: A Holistic Approach While the foundation of Attia's training is rooted in physical fitness—spanning strength, cardio, balance, and endurance—he urges equal attention to other pillars of longevity. Diet, sleep, emotional wellbeing, and responsible use of medication or supplements all play crucial roles in keeping the mind and body agile. The centenarian decathlon isn't about defying age—it's about embracing it with purpose and preparation. By treating aging like a sport and training for the life we want to live, Attia offers a new lens to view elderhood not as a slow decline, but as a final act worth rehearsing for. You Might Also Like: Longevity decoded: 70-year-old cardiologist reveals the one change that made him stronger than ever So if you're scrolling through your feed wondering when to start — the answer, according to Attia, is now. Because the most important race of your life might just be the one you haven't begun training for yet. You Might Also Like: Want to live longer? Forget expensive experiments; longevity doctor reveals simple secrets to a healthier, happier life

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