Abstract
Critical information and statistics on national and regional health
infrastructure and provision. An essential source of detailed key business
data on this fast growing economy.
Understanding India's Regional Health Markets lets you explore regional Indian
markets to make a practical evaluation of opportunity and risk. Whether you
are manufacturing or distributing locally, working through
subsidiaries/partners or just assessing the potential, this fascinating report
is a must-have resource to fully appreciate the diverse regional health
environments in India.
Identifying opportunities in India's rapidly expanding health economy requires
detailed knowledge of the economic performance, health infrastructure and
health personnel distribution at a state/territory level. Being able to see
that in the context of neighbouring provinces and the national picture brings
focus to areas of opportunity and need.
Any assessment of India's health provision must consider the huge variations
to be found in such a geographically diverse country where the population is
distributed over 644,278 cities, towns and villages. Key questions asked and
answered by this report include:
- How is the population and wealth distributed?
- Which states and territories produce the highest levels of GDP?
- What is the primary and secondary health infrastructure in each region?
- How is healthcare delivered?
- What is the role played by private/government health provision at state
level?
- Which regions are better provided for and which still need investment?
Rich in statistics, charts and maps, this new 110-page report Understanding
Regional Indian Health Markets takes you further into understanding the
dynamic Indian regional health sector. A comprehensive introduction sets the
national scene while summary data for each state/territory highlights the key
economic characteristics and health infrastructure. Comparative statistics are
provided for each state/territory and can be seen in the light of national
averages.
Setting the scene
India's 1.21 billion population is distributed across 35 states and union
territories, and is growing at 1.6% a year. In terms of landmass, India is
approximately one third the size of the USA. India has an established mainly
urban middle class but the bulk of the rest of the population have little by
way of income and resources.
As with many emerging markets a divide is opening up between the urban and
rural population. This is exacerbated in India where, despite there being over
45 cities with more than 1 million inhabitants, the majority of the population
live rurally in over 638,000 villages - many of them remote and difficult to
access. The impact on key health indicators, such as infant mortality, can be
clearly seen and despite per capita health spending more than doubling in the
last 10 years there is some way to go.
Government health spending has not kept pace with private expenditure with
health insurance covering no more than 5%. Out of pocket funding of healthcare
remains dominant and the growing number of middle classes have been
influential in the growth and success of the many private hospital groups.
Public & Private Health Spending, 1995-2010
Source: WHO
Compare and Contrast: Haryana and Rajasthan: The Indian market is one of great
diversity, and the gap between the ‘haves' and ‘have nots' is
stark. Consider the following comparisons of selected statistics between the
two neighbouring north western states of Haryana and Rajasthan which have
dramatically different economic drivers.
- Information
- Population
- GDP
- GDP per capita
- Birth rate per 000
- Infant mortality per 000 live births
- Urban rate
- Rural rate
|
- National
- 1,210,193,000
- US$1,049 billion
- US$1017
- 22.1
- 47
- 31
- 51
|
- Haryana
- 25,353,000
- US$42.8 billion
- US$1723
- 22.3
- 48
- 38
- 51
|
- Rajasthan
- 68,621,000
- US$49.5 billion
- US$748
- 26.7
- 55
- 55
- 31
|
Table of Contents
Summary
Geography
Political and Economic Background
Demography
- Population
- Demographic Indicators
- Births
- Deaths
- Infant Mortality
- Life Expectancy at Birth
- Morbidity
- Communicable Diseases
- HIV/AIDS
- Leprosy
- Tuberculosis
- Vector Borne Diseases
- Non-communicable Diseases
- Blindness
- Cancer
- Diabetes, Cardiovascular Disease and Stroke
- Mortality
Healthcare Sector
- Organisation
- Public Sector
- Department of Health and Family Welfare
- National Rural Health Mission
- Department of AYUSH
- Private Sector
- Health Expenditure
- Primary Care
- First Aid and Disaster Relief
- Hospital Facilities
- Public Hospitals and CHCs
- Private Hospitals and Clinics
- Apollo Hospitals Group
- Fortis Healthcare
- Max Healthcare
- Wockhardt Hospitals
- Other Commercial Providers
- Medical Personnel
Regional Data Comparisons
- East India
- Bihar
- Jharkhand
- Orissa
- West Bengal
- Northeast India
- Arunachal Pradesh
- Assam
- Manipur
- Meghalaya
- Mizoram
- Nagaland
- Sikkim
- Tripura
- North India
- Chandigarh
- Chhattisgarh
- Delhi
- Haryana
- Himachal Pradesh
- Jammu & Kashmir
- Madhya Pradesh
- Punjab
- Rajasthan
- Uttar Pradesh
- Uttarakhand
- South India
- Andhra Pradesh
- Karnataka
- Kerala
- Tamil Nadu
- Andaman & Nicobar Islands
- Lakshadweep
- Puducherry
- West India
- Goa
- Gujarat
- Maharashtra
- Dadra & Nagar Haveli
- Daman & Diu
List of Tables
- Political Landscape, 2012
- India GDP and Real Growth, 2000-2011
- Net State Domestic Product, 2009-2010
- Population by States and Territories, 2001-2011 (000s)
- Demographic Indicators, 2000-2010
- Demographic Indicators by State, 2009
- Reported Incidence of Communicable Diseases, 2005-2009
- Reported Incidence of Vaccine Preventable Diseases, 2008-2010
- Deaths from Communicable Diseases, 2004-2009
- Total Health Spending, 2000-2010
- Health Expenditure by Sector, 2005-06 to 2008-09
- Sub-centres and Primary Health Centres by State, 2009
- Government Hospitals & Beds in Rural & Urban Areas by State, 2011
- Apollo Hospitals in India
- Fortis Healthcare Hospitals in India
- Max Healthcare Hospitals
- Wockhardt Hospitals
- Doctors Registered with State Medical Councils, 2007-2010
- Dental Surgeons Registered with Central/State Dental Councils, 2007-2009
- Nurses and Pharmacists by State, 2011
- Bihar: Key Healthcare Data
- Jharkhand: Key Healthcare Data
- Orissa: Key Healthcare Data
- West Bengal: Key Healthcare Data
- Arunachal Pradesh: Key Healthcare Data
- Assam: Key Healthcare Data
- Manipur: Key Healthcare Data
- Meghalaya: Key Healthcare Data
- Mizoram: Key Healthcare Data
- Nagaland: Key Healthcare Data
- Sikkim: Key Healthcare Data
- Tripura: Key Healthcare Data
- Chandigarh: Key Healthcare Data
- Chhattisgarh: Key Healthcare Data
- Delhi: Key Healthcare Data
- Haryana: Key Healthcare Data
- Himachal Pradesh: Key Healthcare Data
- Jammu & Kashmir: Key Healthcare Data
- Madhya Pradesh: Key Healthcare Data
- Punjab: Key Healthcare Data
- Rajasthan: Key Healthcare Data
- Uttar Pradesh: Key Healthcare Data
- Uttarakhand: Key Healthcare Data
- Andhra Pradesh: Key Healthcare Data
- Karnataka: Key Healthcare Data
- Kerala: Key Healthcare Data
- Tamil Nadu: Key Healthcare Data
- Andaman & Nicobar Islands: Key Healthcare Data
- Lakshadweep: Key Healthcare Data
- Puducherry: Key Healthcare Data
- Goa: Key Healthcare Data
- Gujarat: Key Healthcare Data
- Maharashtra: Key Healthcare Data
- Dadra & Nagar Haveli: Key Healthcare Data
- Daman & Diu: Key Healthcare Data
Charts
- Map of India
- GDP Per Capita and Growth, 2000-2011
- Population by Age Group (%)
- Public & Private Health Spending, 1995-2010
- Map of India's States and Union Territories
Understanding India's Regional Health Markets published by Espicom Business Intelligence in April 23, 2012. This report consists of 110 Pages and the price starts from US $ 725.