A gripping expose of the murky underbelly of the Indian healthcare system
95 per cent of healthcare facilities have less than five workers
30 million people are pushed into poverty by healthcare costs
9 lakh C-sections are preventable
7.04 lakh children under the age of five die of pneumonia and diarrhoea every year
For Dr Sumanth C. Raman, the numbers don't lie. Decades of witnessing the inner workings of India's healthcare industry first-hand have given him ample reason to question and challenge it.
In Sick Business, through personal accounts of patients, interviews with doctors and other medical professionals, and numerous reports, he unveils a chilling portrait of a healthcare system marred by vested interests, shady research, lax State intent, questionable ethics and general disarray. Overburdened public hospitals, expensive private healthcare, a rampant culture of quacks, the nexus between big pharma and doctors, a silent epidemic of surgeries and over-diagnosis-the book deals with such burning topics and more as it uncovers the truth behind the pristine façade of hospitals and the doctors who work within.
Sick Business is a clarion call for reform and change. A gripping expose, in the end the book equips you with some real answers and the tough questions you need to ask when your family's health-and perhaps your own-is at stake.
After graduating from the prestigious Madras Medical College in 1989, Dr Sumanth C. Raman worked as a consultant physician in various hospitals in Chennai. Though medicine was his calling, he has always been interested in the broader aspects of healthcare, which led him to work with Tata Consultancy Services as a key member of their Healthcare Innovation team. He oversaw some of the largest implementation of Hospital Information Systems in India, Europe and China. He tweets under the handle @sumanthraman.