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Gautam Khanna joins NATHEALTH board

Gautam Khanna joins NATHEALTH board

Time of India17-06-2025
NATHEALTH
Foundation has announced the appointment of Gautam Khanna to its
Board
, effective March 19, 2025.
Khanna is a General Council Member of NATHEALTH and has experience in
healthcare
operations, strategic leadership, and cross-sector partnerships.
He currently serves as CEO of P.D. Hinduja
Hospital
& Medical Research Centre. It is indicated that he has led initiatives focused on patient-centred care, operational improvement, and institutional innovation.
It is stated that he has over 35 years of experience in
hospital management
,
medical technology
, and healthcare systems.
Khanna is currently engaged in health policy and quality initiatives, including as a member of the Quality Council of India's APEX Steering Committee for Accreditation++. He also serves as President of the Association of Hospitals (Mumbai).
The foundation notes that Khanna has held several key industry positions, including Chair of the
FICCI
Health Services Committee (2022–23) and the FICCI Medical Device Forum. He has also participated in task forces for healthcare and hospital initiatives at IIT Kanpur and serves as a member of the Executive Committee for PAN IIT Alumni, India (2022–2025).
Commenting on the development, Khanna said, "I am deeply committed to supporting initiatives that foster innovation, strengthen institutional capacity, and deliver tangible impact across the healthcare value chain. Together, we have the opportunity to reimagine health systems that truly serve the needs of every Indian."
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The manufacturing units must have a GMP (Good Manufacturing Practices) certificate and adhere to licensing and labelling norms. The FSSAI even monitors standards and ad campaigns of the products, ensuring they do not make dramatic claims like a cure. Even the smallest of claims should be backed by big data sets. You can't say we saw results in five or 10 per cent of subjects,' says Dr Sharma. Yet, reports of contamination with heavy metals and poor ingredient control — especially in herbal products — persist. That's why Dr Sharma suggests a risk categorisation for supplements at the policy level. 'High-risk items should be prescription-only. This will curb misuse,' he says. India may be mimicking the supplement boom in the West but that happened because of expensive healthcare and limited accessibility to doctors at the primary level. 'In India, doctors are more available, even at the primary care level. That's why we must base choices on medical advice,' reasons Dr Sharma. 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