The Growing Risk Burden
India faces a significant challenge with prevalent health risks now emerging at much younger ages and often evading detection through traditional methods.
Sangita Reddy, Joint Managing Director of Apollo Hospitals, highlights that conventional healthcare models, which primarily focus on symptom-driven treatment, are no longer sufficient. Apollo's internal data reveals concerning trends, such as one in five individuals under the age of 30 exhibiting signs of prediabetes. Furthermore, a substantial 74% of those diagnosed with fatty liver through ultrasound actually have normal liver enzyme levels, indicating that risks are often silent and invisible in standard check-ups. This underscores the critical need to shift from an episodic, illness-focused approach to one that prioritizes prediction, continuous monitoring, and tailored interventions, as chronic diseases often develop over many years before becoming clinically apparent.
Shifting Towards Prevention
The historical inclination of healthcare systems towards treating existing illnesses rather than preventing them has been a major impediment to scaling preventive strategies. This orientation, embedded in funding, insurance, and medical training, lacked a strong economic justification for preventative care. However, the stark reality of rising chronic disease rates and the increasing commercial viability of continuous patient engagement via digital platforms are driving a significant change. Employers are now recognizing the profound impact of workforce health on productivity and long-term business sustainability. When data shows a high prevalence of conditions like obesity and prediabetes among employees, it necessitates a strategic shift. The critical challenge lies in ensuring sustained follow-up and accountability after initial screenings; merely providing a report is insufficient. The move towards continuous, connected care through digital health records, teleconsultations, integrated diagnostics, and remote monitoring is making prevention a scalable solution.
AI's Role in Prevention
Artificial Intelligence and digital tools hold immense potential to scale preventive healthcare across India, but their deployment must be grounded in clinical accuracy and accountability. Technology possesses an unparalleled capacity to identify health risks at a magnitude that surpasses human systems. For instance, AI can discern subtle metabolic patterns in young adults that might later manifest as symptomatic conditions. Remote monitoring further contributes by constructing a comprehensive, ongoing health profile rather than relying on infrequent snapshots. Nevertheless, the value of data is amplified only when interpreted by clinical experts; AI serves to flag potential issues, but physicians are responsible for determining the appropriate course of action. This synergy is crucial for effective risk management. Moreover, expanding digital infrastructure is democratizing access, enabling individuals in smaller cities to consult specialists, share vital health data, and receive personalized guidance previously confined to major urban centers. Apollo's extensive digital backbone, encompassing EMR, HIS, and PACS, facilitated 7.99 million digital consultations and 8.5 million lab bookings in 2025 alone, demonstrating the power of scale when coupled with a focus on continuity and patient engagement.
The Connected Care Model
Apollo Hospitals is actively transitioning from a traditional, episodic model of hospital care to a more integrated, continuous, and connected approach. The inherent limitation of episodic care is that the crucial period between patient visits, where outcomes for chronic diseases are largely shaped, often goes unmonitored. The new model aims to bridge this gap through structured follow-ups, routine digital check-ins via platforms like Apollo 24/7, and meticulously personalized care plans. These plans are not generic but are specifically tailored, considering individual factors such as age, gender, risk profile, and metabolic history. For example, a 25-year-old with early prediabetes requires a distinct management strategy compared to a 60-year-old managing long-term diabetes. Connected care ensures that both individuals receive consistent, contextually relevant support over time. Early indicators of success are promising, with 56% of hypertensive patients who adhere to recommended interventions demonstrating measurable improvements in their health status.
Future-Ready Healthcare Pillars
The vision for 'future-ready healthcare' is built upon three interconnected pillars designed to proactively identify and manage health risks. Firstly, diagnostic capabilities must evolve beyond merely confirming existing diseases to proactively identifying early indicators of risk, encompassing metabolic, genetic, and lifestyle factors well in advance of symptom onset. Secondly, data systems need to generate comprehensive, longitudinal health records that capture the full spectrum of an individual's health journey, rather than fragmented test results. Thirdly, patient engagement strategies must be highly personalized and relevant, recognizing that generic advice is often ineffective in driving meaningful behavioral change. The 'Apollo ProHealth' initiative exemplifies this integrated approach, combining predictive risk assessment, sophisticated diagnostics, and physician-guided evaluations that extend beyond a single clinical encounter. Ultimately, a future-ready healthcare system is defined not by its technological sophistication alone, but by its fundamental ability to detect health risks at their earliest stages and manage them with sustained consistency, with the overarching goal of intervening sooner, maintaining engagement longer, and preventing disease before it takes hold.














