Picture an eye-care facility in a remote rural town in India. Do you imagine it having obsolete equipment, dirty ambience, rickety furniture and an inattentive staff? A visit to Maddur taluka, near Channapatna in Karnataka, can prove you wrong. The city’s per capita income is a mere Rs.46,049 — way below the state average of Rs.126,976. But its 800 sq mt vision centre, managed by Drishti Eye Care, leverages telemedicine technology that is both high-end and impressive.
Well-trained staff, pre-diagnosis tests, image capturing of the eye, a system to push all these data to the cloud and an online interface which presents the data to the doctor who later interacts with the patient via a high-bandwidth skype video call. The Maddur centre offers all these astonishing facilities for a mere consultation fee of Rs.150.
So, what helps Drishti sustain the business? While the outreach and engagement programmes bring in people, a strong technological platform in the backend crunches numbers to bring a lot of analytics and efficiency. Anandampillai gives a demo of the Online Reporting Visual Module, developed in-house by Drishti. “Even as I speak, across all our units, 298 patients visited, of which 190 were new. In Maddur, we saw five patients. There is separate data for each centre. Last month we had done 389 surgeries, 432 before that, and the average yield per surgery is Rs.7,600.” That’s an exhaustive set of numbers, but it is this module which helps Drishti monitor the system, helping it spread across multiple districts. Being a low-margin business, the founders were clear right from the beginning about the role of technology in scaling up and invested in it right since Drishti’s inception.