Reframing the Governance of Corporate Hospitals in India
Background
Corporate hospitals have become a significant pillar of India’s healthcare delivery system, contributing to advanced medical infrastructure, specialised care, and medical tourism. However, their operational philosophy has increasingly mirrored that of conventional commercial enterprises, where profit maximisation and cost minimisation dominate decision-making.
While financial sustainability is necessary, applying a purely commercial framework to healthcare risks compromising ethics, patient trust, and equitable access to care. Healthcare is fundamentally distinct from other industries—it deals with human life, dignity, and societal well-being.
Problem Statement
There is growing public concern regarding:
- Over-commercialisation of healthcare services
- Unnecessary diagnostics and procedures driven by revenue targets
- Lack of transparency in billing and pricing
- Financial exploitation during medical emergencies
- Erosion of trust between patients and healthcare providers
- Taxation policy for Health sector should be totally different from all Other Sectors.
Such trends not only burden individuals financially but also weaken the credibility of the healthcare system as a whole.
Policy Objective
To establish a differentiated governance and regulatory framework for corporate hospitals that ensures:
- Ethical, patient-centric care
- Transparency and accountability
- Financial sustainability aligned with social responsibility
- Restoration of public trust in institutional healthcare .
Key policy Recommendations
1. Patient-Centric Governance Framework
Mandate that all clinical decisions be based solely on medical necessity. Introduce institutional policies that explicitly prohibit revenue-linked clinical targets.
2. Ethical Standards and Accountability
Develop measurable indicators for compassion, ethical conduct, and patient outcomes. Incorporate these into hospital accreditation, licensing, and periodic evaluations.
3. Transparent and Standardised Pricing
- Enforce clear disclosure of treatment costs
- Standardise pricing for common procedures where feasible
- Require itemised billing with justification for major interventions
4. Independent Regulatory Oversight
Establish or strengthen independent regulatory bodies to:
- Audit hospital practices and billing patterns
- Address patient grievances swiftly
- Publish performance ratings based on ethics, outcomes, and patient satisfaction—not just infrastructure
- Introduce Ombudsman Scheme to redress Complaints of patients.
5. Balanced Financial Model
Encourage a hybrid model where:
- Profitability supports sustainability and reinvestment
- A defined portion of capacity/services is allocated for affordable care
- Incentives are provided for hospitals demonstrating social responsibility
6. Holistic Healthcare Delivery
Promote expansion beyond curative care to include:
- Preventive healthcare and early diagnosis programs
- Mental health and counselling services
- Patient education and post-treatment support
7. Medical Tourism with Ethical Positioning
Position India as a global destination for value-based healthcare, combining clinical excellence with humane treatment and transparent pricing.
Implementation Approach
- Ministry-led task force with representation from healthcare professionals, economists, ethicists, and patient groups
- Phased regulatory reforms with pilot programs in major metropolitan areas
- Integration with existing accreditation systems and digital health platforms
- Continuous monitoring through publicly accessible dashboards Expected Outcomes
- Improved trust in corporate healthcare institutions
- Reduction in unethical medical practices
- Greater affordability and transparency in healthcare delivery
- Enhanced global reputation of India’s healthcare system
- Alignment of healthcare growth with societal well-being
- Taxation policy needs total review to reduce the cost of treatment , increase the trust in Hospitals and enhance affordability with or without Insurance.
Conclusion
Corporate hospitals are not merely business entities—they are custodians of human life. Their governance must reflect this responsibility. A shift from profit-driven healthcare to value-driven healthcare is not just desirable; it is essential for building a just, equitable, and trusted healthcare system in India.
Samastha Loka Sukhino Bhavanthu.
TVG Krishnan
(personal Views)