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Achievers
Every month Express Healthcare highlights achievements of
doctors and other professionals and contributors to the healthcare industry.
To nominate your employees/colleagues for Achievers, mail healthcare@expressindia.com
and we will get in touch with you!
A Doctor's Prescription for Branding
With
over two decades of experience in healthcare, Dr Sanjiv Malik (44), Regional
Director, Max Healthcare is switching hats to write a book on branding and marketing.
"With corporatisation of healthcare, branding and marketing of hospitals
have assumed significant importance, and determine the success and failure of
a hospital," he avers. He has set March 2008 as the deadline to finish
the book. He intends to cover topics like strategies to understand and meet
customer needs, methods and need for creating a brand, ways to have an edge
over competition, and steps to sustain the brand over 350 pages and 12-14 chapters.
However, Dr Malik hasn't approached a publisher yet for the book which he is
writing in any available free time. Aimed at hospital administration students
and young hospital administrators, the contents of the book are gleaned as much
from his real experience of running hospitals as from age-old ideas and practices
in branding and marketing. "Despite the mushrooming of healthcare management
institutes, it is sad that we don't have dedicated books on marketing and branding
for the healthcare industry. This book will definitely fill that vacuum,"
he predicts.
Next up is a book on basic principles of financial management
of a hospital, but only after December 2008, as it is still at a conceptual
stage.
A 'Joy'ous Transition
With
the illustrious Anupam Verma moving on to bigger roles, Joy Chakraborty has
stepped in as the new Deputy Director, Administration of Mumbai's PD Hinduja
Hospital. After nine years in Chennai's Sri Ramchandra Medical Centre (SRMC),
where he joined as a trainee administrator with a PG programme in Hospital Administration,
Chakraborty is excited about his new role. And he is not daunted by the colossal
responsibility that his 33-year-young shoulders have to bear. The role demands
that he takes absolute control of administration (non-clinical and service areas)
and is available 24x7. "I understand the immense responsibility and expectations
of people from me. I will discharge my duty to the best of my capabilities."
His destiny changed with a chance meeting with one of the promoters of the Hinduja
Group. "After understanding the vision of the expanding Hinduja Group,
I felt it would be challenging to undertake this responsibility and be an agent
to turn the vision into reality," he says. Right now, he is studying various
administrative systems and processes to chalk out reforms. "I want to work
on process improvement, business process re-engineering, introduction of value-added
services and also on brand and positioning of the hospital," he reveals.
All eyes are on Chakraborty's dreams and promised efforts.
Delivering Health to the Masses
A
manager one day and a community doctor the next. That's Mumbai's Dr Seema Gupta
(41) for you. She is equally passionate about her roles as a domain consultant
from Wipro HealthCare IT and as a doctor treating slum dwellers. Every week,
she offers free consultation for slum dwellers in Santacruz. "Rich people
can go anywhere for treatment, but it's these poor people who require medical
aid the most," says Dr Gupta, who also runs her own hospital management
consultancy. Her story began in 1994, when she was appalled at the unhealthy
condition of children in slums in her locality. Along with some like-minded
doctors, she joined the NGO All India Balkanji Bari, which works to uplift slum
children. What started as a mission to treat underprivileged children has now
been extended to adults as well. "Earlier, it was more education rather
than treatment as the children lived in unbelievably unhygienic conditions and
suffered from running noses and other ailments. So, it was more about inculcating
healthy habits," recalls Dr Gupta. The NGO provides the space and medicine,
"I prescribe general treatment or if required, refer to a specialist."
To make the dwellers realise the value of the medicine, a minimal fee of Rs
5 is charged by the NGO, because "they feel they have paid for it, so they
cannot afford to waste it," she says.
Compiled by Rita Dutta and Nancy Singh
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