Healthcare in Chennai
Healthcare in Chennai is provided by both government-run and private hospitals. Chennai attracts about 45 percent of health tourists from abroad arriving in the country and 30 to 40 percent of domestic health tourists.[1] The city has been termed India's health capital.[1][2][3] Multi- and super-specialty hospitals across the city bring in an estimated 150 international patients every day.[3] Factors behind the tourists' inflow in the city include low costs, little to no waiting period,[4] and facilities offered at the speciality hospitals in the city.[3]
History
The medical lineage of the city began with the first hospital of India set up at Fort St. George on 16 November 1664 by Sir Edward Winter to treat sick soldiers of the East India Company.[5] The hospital grew, expanded, and moved out of the fort to its present location in 1772, where it stands today as the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, and was opened to Indians in 1842.[6] In 1785, medical departments were set up in Bengal, Madras, and Bombay presidencies with 234 surgeons.[5]
Although the Western system of medicine was brought to India by the Portuguese, the base for a systematised and widespread network of government-run hospitals began with the hospital in Madras, as the city was known then. Throughout the colonial era, doctors from Europe and Eurasia trained and practised at the first hospital. Between 1800 and 1820, about four hospitals were formed in Madras.[5] In 1835, Madras Medical College was set up, making it one of the oldest colleges of European medicine in Asia. In 1854, when the British government agreed to supply medicines and instruments to the growing network of minor hospitals and dispensaries, government store depots were established in Calcutta, Madras, Bombay, and Rangoon.[5] In 1900, the Christian Medical College, Vellore was established, attracting some of the best talents in the United States. The Madras Public Health Act, the first of its kind in the country, was passed in 1939.[5]
In the later half of the twentieth century, many prominent institutions began to appear in the city. The Cancer Institute in Adyar was set up in 1954, and Sankara Nethralaya was founded in 1976, adding to the city's reputation. Along with the Government General Hospital they served as renowned centres for diagnosis, treatment and research for decades. The establishment of the Apollo Hospital in the city in 1983 marked the advent of corporate hospitals in the country.[3] The city is where one of the earliest paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) was established in the 1990s.[7]
Today, Chennai is the hub of medical tourism in the country, an industry that is expected to grow at an estimated 30% per year, which is expected to become worth about ₹ 95,000 million by 2015, according to the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India.[3]
Healthcare institutes
The government-aided hospitals in the city include General Hospital, Government multi-super speciality hospital, Government Kilpauk Hospital, Government Royapettah Hospital, Government Stanley Hospital, Adyar Cancer Institute, TB Sanatorium, and National Institute of Siddha. The National Institute of Siddha is one of the seven apex national-level educational institutions that promote excellence in Indian system of medicine and Ayurveda.[8] Non-profit hospitals in the city include the Hindu Mission Hospital. Some of the popular private-run hospitals in Chennai are Apollo Hospitals, SIMS Hospital, Dr. Kamakshi Memorial Hospitals,[9] Chettinad Health City, Billroth Hospitals, MIOT Hospital, Global Health City, SRM Hospital, Vasan Healthcare, Kauvery Hospital, Deepam Pallavaram Hospital, Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre and OneHealth Super Speciality Hospital. The prime NABH-accredited hospitals includes Chennai Apollo Speciality Hospital, Dr Mehta Hospitals, Frontier Lifeline Hospital, Global Hospitals & Health City, Sankara Nethralaya, and Vijaya Medical & Educational Trust.[10] Apollo Hospitals Group has five hospitals in the city, including a main hospital and a speciality oncology hospital, with a total bed count of 1,100.[11] The city has about seven palliative care units.[12] Poonamallee High Road, one of the arterial roads of the city, has more hospitals than any other roads in the city and is known as the city's 'Med street'.[13]
As of 2012, the city had an estimated 12,500 hospital beds, of which only half is used by the city's population with the rest being shared by patients from other states of the country and foreigners.[14] It is estimated that the number of beds in multi-specialty hospitals in the private sector in the city is in the range of 5,000 beds, whereas in the public sector it is over 6,000 beds.[15] This works to 2.1 beds per 1,000 population against the national average of less than 1 bed per 1,000 population, making the city better than other cities in the country, viz., Delhi (1.4), Mumbai (0.8), Kolkata (0.8), Hyderabad (1.5) and Bangalore (2.1). However, this still does not fulfil World Health Organization norms of three beds per 1,000 persons.[14] By mid-2012, with the addition of at least 3,000 beds in four leading hospitals in the city, the private hospital sector in the city is expected to increase its bed strength by nearly 25 percent.[14] As of 2019, four government hospitals have pay wards, namely, Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital (198 beds), Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and Government Hospital for Women and Children (46 beds), Government Kasturba Gandhi Hospital for Women and Children (32 beds), and Gastrointestinal Bleed Centre of Government Stanley Medical College Hospital (58 beds). The occupancy rates in these pay wards was 90 to 100 percent.[16]
According to Chennai Corporation sources, there are about 250 registered laboratories in the city, although there are almost thrice as many unregistered ones.[17] The city has six units of the state government's co-operative drug stores across the state known as Kamadhenu co-operative medical stores, where a wide range of 13,000 important medicines would be sold, including 6,000 medicines available on any given day. The government is planning to add 10 more stores in the city.[18]
In May 2011, Corporation of Chennai initiated an online direct health-reporting system under which all the hospitals in the city are required to provide details of the patients on a daily basis to the corporation.[19]
Institute | Hospital type | Locality | Established | Chief specialty | Number of beds | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Government General Hospital | Government | Park Town | 1664 | General medicine | 2,029[20] | The first medical institution in India | |
MGM Healthcare | Private | Aminjikarai | Multi Specialty | 400 | Multi Specialty Hospital in Chennai | ||
SIMS Hospital | Private | Vadapalani | 2014 | Multi Super Specialty Quaternary Care | 345 | Corporate Hospital established by SRM Group | |
Government multi-super speciality hospital | Government | Government Estate | 2014 | General medicine | 400 | Originally built as an assembly complex but later converted into a hospital | |
Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre | Private | Gopalapuram | 1991 | Diabetes[21] | |||
Government Royapettah Hospital | Government | Royapettah | 1911 | General medicine | 712[20] | ||
Government Stanley Hospital | Government | Vallalar Nagar | 1799 | General medicine | 1,271[20] | ||
Kilpauk Medical College Hospital | Government | Kilpauk | 1960 | General medicine | 515[20] | ||
Perambur railway hospital | Government | Ayanavaram | 1928 | General medicine | 505 | ||
Institute of Obstetrics & Gynaecology Hospital for Women & Children | Government | Egmore | Obstetrics & Gynaecology and Paediatrics | 752[20] | |||
Institute of Child Health & Hospital for Children | Government | Egmore | 1948 | Paediatrics | 537[20] | ||
Government Institute of Mental Health | Government | Kilpauk | 1794 | Neurology | 1,800[20] | Second largest mental health institute in India | |
Government Peripheral Hospital, K. K. Nagar | Government | K. K. Nagar | 1977 | General medicine | 100[20] | ||
Government Peripheral Hospital, Tondiarpet | Government | Tondiarpet | 1979 | General medicine | 100[20] | ||
Government Peripheral Hospital, Anna Nagar | Government | Anna Nagar | 1979 | General medicine | 100[20] | ||
Regional Institute of Ophthalmology and Government Ophthalmic Hospital | Government | Egmore | 1819 | Ophthalmology | 478[20] | ||
Government Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine | Government | K. K. Nagar | 1979 | 60[20] | |||
Government Hospital of Thoracic Medicine | Government | Tambaram Sanatorium | 1920 | Thoracic medicine | 776[20] | ||
Raja Sir Ramasamy Mudaliar Lying-In Hospital | Government | Royapuram | 1880 | 510[20] | |||
Voluntary Health Services | Private | Taramani | 1958 | 465 | |||
Government Kasthuribai Gandhi Hospital | Government | Chepauk | 695[20] | ||||
Institute of Thoracic Medicine, Chetput | Government | Chetput | 1916 | ||||
Thiruvetreeswarar Hospital for Thoracic Medicine, Otteri | Government | Otteri | |||||
Tamil Nadu Government Dental College and Hospital | Government | George Town | 1953 | ||||
Adyar Cancer Institute | Adyar | 1954 | Oncology | 423 | Rated by the World Health Organization as the top-ranking centre in the country | ||
Apollo Hospitals | Greams Road | 1983 | First corporate hospital in the country | ||||
Chettinad Health City | Corporate | Kelambakkam | 2007 | 600 | |||
Fortis Malar Hospital | Corporate | Adyar | 161 | ||||
Hindu Mission Hospital | NGO | Tambaram | 1982 | 220 | |||
LIMA (Lifeline Institute of Minimal Access) Keyhole Surgery | Corporate | Kilpauk | 1932 | Keyhole Surgery (since 1997) | 100 | Started as an individual-owned clinic | |
MGM Healthcare | Private | Aminjikarai | General medicine | 400 | |||
Madras Medical Mission | Mugappair | 1987 | 207 | ||||
National Institute of Siddha | Tambaram | 2005 | 120 | ||||
OneHealth Super Speciality Hospital | Private | Vandalur | 2022 | Multi Speciality Tertiary Care | 65 | ||
Sankara Nethralaya | 1978 | ||||||
Sir Ivan Stedeford Hospital | Ambattur | 1966 | 212 | ||||
Sri Ramachandra Medical College | Porur | 1985 | >1,500 | ||||
Sundaram Medical Foundation | Anna Nagar | 1990 | |||||
Dr. Kamakshi Memorial Hospitals | Corporate | Pallikaranai, Velachery & Chennai | 2005 | 300 | Performed more than 45000+ critical surgeries | ||
MIOT Hospital | Private | Manapakkam | 1999 | Orthopaedics and Traumatology | 1000 [22] | Performed more than 30,000 joint replacement surgeries[23] | |
Billroth Hospitals | Corporate | Shenoy Nagar, RA Puram and Tiruvallur | 1990 | 600 | |||
Balaji Dental and Craniofacial Hospital | Teynampet | 1994 | 25 | ||||
Deepam Pallavaram Hospital | Pallavaram | 1995 | Trauma Care | >135 to 250 | |||
Dr. Mehta's Hospitals | Private | Chetpet, Velappanchavadi | 1933 | Multi Specialty Tertiary Care | |||
Apollo Hospitals | Private | 21 Greams Lane, Off, Greams Road, Thousand Lights | 1983 | Multi Specialty Tertiary Care | 560 | ||
Home healthcare
Home healthcare and home nursing are also a growing phenomena in India. India Home Health Care is one such service provider, based in Chennai and Bangalore with over 300 nurses. Now, on-demand platforms like "Treat at Home" app are providing services like doctor home visit, nursing, caretaking and physiotherapy to patients at home by connecting them with their nearest available providers.[24][25]
Medical education
The city has four government medical colleges and one ESI medical college, apart from private medical colleges. The four government-run colleges include Madras Medical College, Stanley Medical College, Kilpauk Medical College, and Omandurar Government Medical College.[26]
Medical tourism
With people from across the country and abroad preferring to get treated in the hospitals in Chennai, the city is increasingly becoming a hub of medical tourism.[27] According to a study by Confederation of Indian Industries (CII), Chennai attracts about 40 percent of the country's medical tourists.[28] As of 2013, the city receives up to 200 foreign patients every day.[29] The Coromandel Express, which plies between Kolkata and Chennai, is nicknamed 'Ambulance Express' in Howrah since it regularly ferries a chunk of patients from the eastern region for medical treatment at hospitals in Chennai.[30] Foreigners, especially those from developing and underdeveloped countries such as Nigeria, Kenya, Burundi, Congo, Malawi, Bangladesh, Oman and Iraq, come to the city for advanced medical care.[31] About 150 Maldivian patients arrive at the city every day for medical treatment, which resulted in Maldivian Airlines launching a thrice-a-week direct flight from Male to Chennai.[32] From Malawi, numerous patients are travelling to India.[33] Their most preferred destination is Chennai & Medobal healthcare.[34] However, there are no consolidated statistics about the number of foreign patients that the city receives. Most leading hospitals, which receive a steady stream of patients from other states of India and abroad every day, have separate wings for international patients. Sri Ramachandra Medical Centre receives up to 100 overseas patients a month. Dr.Kamakshi Memorial Hospital receives 10 to 15 foreign patients in a month. Fortis Malar Hospital receives 15 to 20 foreign patients a month. Madras Medical Mission receives 14 foreign medical tourists every month, mainly from East African nations. Sankara Nethralaya receives nearly 500 overseas patients a month.[31] MIOT Hospitals receives nearly 300 foreign patients every month.[35] The Medical Tourism Industry in India is expected to reach US$9 billion by 2020.[36]
Special certifications
With more than 75 percent of the medical tourists being from the Middle East, hospitals in the city are vying for 'halal' certification. On 14 May 2012, the city-based Global Health City became the first in the country to receive the halal certification from the Halal Development Authority.[37] Other hospitals in the city that have applied for the certification include Mehta Hospitals and Lifeline Hospitals.[37] Halal-friendly medical tourism services include food, prayer hall, 'quiblah' (the direction of Mecca) signs in every room, prayer mat, copies of Quran and appointments of woman physicians for woman patients.[38]
Supportive infrastructure
In January 2010, Aloka Trivitron Medical Technologies Park, the country's first medical technological park, was inaugurated in the SIPCOT complex at Irungattukottai in Sriperumbudur.[39] Spread across 25 acres, the medical technology park, a facility to produce high-tech medical equipment, is designed to house 10 international medical technology manufacturers, in addition to Trivitron's own manufacturing units. The range of products to be manufactured at the medical technology park include ultrasound systems, X-ray machines/C-arm, in-vitro diagnostic reagents, modular operating theatres, operating room tables and lights, molecular diagnostic products, hemodialysis products, ECG/cardiac diagnostic instruments, critical care instruments and implantable medical devices.[40][41]
NGOs and Non-Profits
Chennai has a strong base of healthcare non-profit organisations and non-government organisations. One such example is the Indian Heart Association, focused on cardiovascular health prevention.[42]
Other NGO example includes MOHAN Foundation that works for awareness for cadaver donation since 1997 and creating an organ sharing registry in the state of Tamil Nadu.[43]
Facts and records
A former superintendent of the Regional Institute of Ophthalmology in the city, Kirk Patrick, was the first to have found the adenovirus that caused conjunctivitis, leading to the name Madras eye for the disease.[44]
The city is preeminent in transplant surgery, with several city-based hospitals creating records in such surgeries. Chennai recorded the first ever liver transplant in the country in the Government Stanley Medical College in the 1990s.[45]
In May 2011, the Madras Medical College opened the first-of-its-kind Orthopaedic Cadaveric Skills Lab in any government college in the country to train post graduate students in cadaveric dissection.[46]
In March 2012, the Government General Hospital performed its 1,000th kidney transplant, the highest in any government hospital in the country, of which about 90 were cadaver transplants.[45]
In 2008, the state government established a cadaver transplant programme at the Chennai Medical College.[47] The programme has a regular transplant-coordinator and a computerised network linking government and private hospitals.[45] Apollo Hospitals and the Government General Hospital continues to be the two main sources of cadaveric organs in the city. With the organ donor rate in the state of Tamil Nadu standing at 1.2 per million population, which is 15 times the national average, Chennai acts as a hub of deceased organ donation in India.[48]
Tamil Nadu has been the number one state in deceased donation. It has been awarded the best performing state in organ donation and transplantation in India by the Indian government for 2015 and 2016.[49][50][51]
In 2009, a group of doctors and specialists in Chennai and Coimbatore registered the successful treatment of thalassemia in a child using a sibling's umbilical cord blood.[52]
Future projects
In August 2011, the state government decided to convert the much controversial, half-constructed Assembly-Secretariat complex in the city, built at an estimated ₹ 10,920 million, into a multi-specialty hospital.[53]
The city-based KM Cherian–promoted Frontier Lifeline has proposed a ₹ 10,000-million medicity project named Frontier Mediville on 350 acres of land of which 42 acres had received special economic zone (SEZ) status from the central government in 2009. Located at Elavur village, 40 km from the city centre, the project will be executed in three phases. The ₹ 1,600-million first phase will comprise a medical science park in the SEZ zone. It also includes a research and training centre and an animal laboratory to house clinical research organisations (CROs). The second will costing ₹ 5,000 million includes a ₹ 1,440-million bio hospital with 200 beds in the SEZ. The bio hospital is expected to be the first of its kind in India, designed as tertiary care in all sub-specialities of medicine supported by modern basic sciences including stem cell technology, tissue engineering and nanotechnology, which would also focus on integration of traditional and alternate medicinal technologies such as ayurveda, naturopathy, and siddha to the services. The second phase also includes another 750-bed multispeciality general hospital to be developed outside the SEZ.[54]
In 2014, the Indian government decided to establish a regional centre for organ transplant in Chennai, which would be one of the five regional centres in the country. The regional centres would collect data and send it to the national registry. The Chennai centre would cover the southern states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Pondicherry, and Andaman and Nicobar and Lakshadweep islands.[55]
Criticisms
Despite being known as the 'Mecca' of healthcare, only six private hospitals in the city have been accredited by the National Board for Accreditation of Hospitals and Healthcare Providers (NABH) as of 2012.[56][57] However, per a release by National Board for Accreditation of Hospitals and Healthcare Providers, over 23 hospitals in the city were NABH accredited as of 2017.[58]
Per a research published in the August 2011 issue of the Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics, there was no evidence of falsification of medicines in a sampling study carried out in the city, though 43 percent of drugs were substandard.[59]
See also
References
- National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers. "Chennai – India's Health Capital". India Health Visit. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
- "Chennai High: City gets most foreign tourists". The Times of India. Chennai. 27 August 2010. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
- Hamid, Zubeda (20 August 2012). "The medical capital's place in history". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Porecha, Maitri (8 August 2012). "Long wait makes patients head south". Daily News & Analysis. Mumbai: DNAIndia.com. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Mushtaq, Muhammad Umair (January 2009). "Public Health in British India: A Brief Account of the History of Medical Services and Disease Prevention in Colonial India" (PDF). Indian Journal of Community Medicine. Medind.nic.in. 34 (1): 6–14. doi:10.4103/0970-0218.45369. PMC 2763662. PMID 19876448. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
- "History: 1639 A.D. TO 1700 A.D." ChennaiBest.com. Archived from the original on 9 October 2012. Retrieved 19 September 2012.
- Govil, Y. C. (August 2006). "Pediatric intensive care in India: Time for introspection and intensification". Indian Pediatrics. 43 (8): 675–676. PMID 16951431. Retrieved 31 March 2014.
- De, Barun Kumar (2006). Public System Management. New Delhi: New Age International Publishers. ISBN 81-224-1767-1. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
- "Best Multispecialty Hospital in Chennai | Dr.Kamakshi Memorial Hospital". drkmh.com. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
- National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers (March 2012). "NABH Accredited Hospitals". NABH. Archived from the original on 23 July 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
- "EBITDA to cross 4% next year: Apollo Hospitals". Money Control. Chennai: MoneyControl.com. 20 November 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
- Raj, Manish (18 March 2013). "Healthcare gaps leave elders in distress". The Times of India. Chennai. Retrieved 24 March 2013.
- Ramkumar, Pratiksha (9 February 2013). "Hospitals go in for specialty makeover". The Times of India. Chennai. Archived from the original on 11 April 2013. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- "Country's med capital to get 3,000 more beds". The Times of India. Chennai. 16 July 2011. Archived from the original on 29 April 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- Kannan, Ramya (20 August 2011). "What the new hospital and college mean for Chennai". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Josephine M., Serena (3 December 2019). "In-demand pay wards in govt. hospitals to get a facelift". The Hindu. Chennai: Kasturi & Sons. p. 3. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- Srinivasan, Meera; Deepa H. Ramakrishnan (20 February 2012). "Labs need a monitoring agency". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Krishnan, Pramila (6 January 2012). "100 cooperative medical stores in state on anvil". Deccan Chronicle. Chennai. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Lopez, Aloysius Xavier (18 May 2011). "Direct Health Reporting System all set to go online". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers. "Government Hospitals attached to Directorate of Medical Education". Government of Tamil Nadu. Archived from the original on 20 June 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
- "Hope for Diabetics - Founder of Dr Mohans Diabetes Specialities Centres". The Financial Express (India). January 2009.
- Honorary degree for MIOT MD – The Hindu
- A celebration of Chennai's orthopaedic milestones - The Hindu
- "Doorstep Healthcare Service picks up in Chennai". The Hindu. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 2 August 2014.
- "Home Health Care expands". The Hindu Business Line. 26 February 2014. Retrieved 2 August 2014.
- "சென்னையில் மேலும் ஒரு அரசு மருத்துவ கல்லூரி". Maalai Malar (in Tamil). Chennai. 21 May 2014. Archived from the original on 23 May 2014. Retrieved 22 June 2014.
- TRIPATHI, SHWETA (24 March 2018). "Chennai emerging as cheap medical tourism hub". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- Staff Reporter (27 September 2019). "40% of medical tourists to India visit Tamil Nadu: Minister". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- "Chennai remains favourite destination of medical tourists". The Times of India. Chennai. 20 April 2013. Archived from the original on 26 April 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
- Kabirdoss, Yogesh (7 November 2012). "'Ambulance' Express chugs in to Central after a 'sick' journey". The New Indian Express. Chennai: Express Publications. Retrieved 7 November 2012.
- Ashok, Sowmiya; K. Lakshmi (18 July 2011). "A hub of medical tourism". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- Ramkumar, Pratiksha (20 November 2012). "Maldivians fly to Chennai hospitals, but face rule hitch". The Times of India. Chennai. Archived from the original on 28 January 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
- "Medical tourism profile for Malawi: Statistics and data | IMTJ". imtj.com. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- "India's Medobal Health opens branch in Malawi". Malawi Nyasa Times - News from Malawi about Malawi. 26 February 2019. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- "Miot plans hospital in Sudan". Business Line. Chennai: The Hindu. 14 October 2012. Retrieved 18 October 2012.
- "Pandemic Bolsters Case for Telemedicine Across Asia-Pacific".
- Narayan, Puspha (15 May 2012). "Hospitals eye 'halal' certification to attract patients from Middle East". The Times of India. Chennai. Archived from the original on 21 June 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers (4 June 2012). "India's Halal Hospital". On Islam. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- IANS (25 January 2010). "India gets its first medical technology park in Tamil Nadu". My News.in. Chennai: MyNews.in. Archived from the original on 28 January 2010. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- "Deputy CM inaugurates Trivitron Park at SIPCOT". News Today Net. Chennai: NewsTodayNet.com. 28 January 2010. Archived from the original on 29 January 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- "Trivitron Health to invest Rs 100 cr in capacity expansion, buys". Business Line. Chennai: The Hindu. 12 August 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Indian Heart Association Why South Asians Facts. Web. 26 April 2015. <http://indianheartassociation.org/why-indians-why-south-asians/overview/>.
- "Expert Talk - Dr Sunil Shroff » DoctorNDTV for the better health of Indians". Doctor.ndtv.com. Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
- "Chennai's medical history unveiled". The Times of India. Chennai. 23 August 2011. Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- Kumar, G. Pramod (21 March 2012). "Once capital of illegal kidney trade, Chennai now a pioneer in transplants". Firstpost.com. Firstpost.India. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- "MMC gets first of its kind ortho lab in country". The New Indian Express. 3 May 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
- Kannan, Ramya (31 January 2012). "Sharp dip in cadavers at government hospitals a worry". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Ravi, Thilaka (29 June 2011). "Renowned US Organ Transplant Surgeon in Chennai to Support Deceased Organ Donation". Med India. Chennai: MedIndia.net. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- Kannan, Ramya (28 November 2015). "Centre lauds TN's efforts in organ donation". The Hindu. Chennai: Kasturi & Sons. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
- TNN (1 October 2015). "Tamil Nadu leads country in organ donation". The Times of India. Chennai. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
- "Cadaver Transplant Tamilnadu Tops India". The News Today. Chennai: NewsTodayNet.com. 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
- His sister's keeper: Brother's blood is boon of life, Times of India, 17 September 2009
- Kumar, B. Aravind; T. Ramakrishnan (19 August 2011). "It's going to be a multi-super specialty hospital for the poor". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- Babu, Gireesh (12 July 2011). "Frontier Mediville to raise Rs 20 cr via Private equity". Business Standard. Chennai. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
- "Regional centre for organ transplant to be set up in Chennai". The Hindu. Chennai. 11 August 2014. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
- Ramkumar, Pratiksha (13 February 2012). "Healthcare Mecca not world class?". The Times of India. Chennai. Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- Sujatha, R.; Sowmiya Ashok (20 February 2012). "Making a mark in offering quality treatment". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
- National Board for Accreditation of Hospitals and Healthcare Providers, constituent of Quality council of India (29 April 2017). "NABH Accredited Hospitals". Chennai: NABH. pp. www.nabh.co. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- Taylor, Phil (13 July 2011). "Researchers find no evidence of counterfeiting in India's Chennai". Securing Industry. Chennai: SecuringIndustry.com. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
External links
- Kumar, Dr G.A Sathish (12 December 2021). "VRG Health Care - Physiotherapy and Chiropractor Centre in Chennai". Best Chiropractor and Physiotherapy Chennai. Retrieved 12 December 2021.