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Indian cancer care model, delivering at scale, low costs

Hindustan Times Delhi

|

May 20, 2025

INDIA FACES CALLS FROM GLOBAL EXPERTS TO POUR MORE PUBLIC MONEY INTO RESEARCH. BUT RATHER THAN COPYING THE US MODEL OF RESEARCH FOR ITS OWN SAKE, INDIA SHOULD FOCUS ON WHAT IS ALREADY WORKING

- Vivek Wadhwa

The US spends more on health care than any other country, pouring in hundreds of billions of dollars each year into research, sprawling government programmes, and high-profile initiatives. But what does it have to show for this massive investment? Skyrocketing costs, deep inequalities in access, and health outcomes that lag many developed nations. Both its medical and research systems have grown bloated and inefficient, increasingly disconnected from the real needs of patients.

The US Cancer Moonshot is a textbook example of this dysfunction. Launched by President Barack Obama in 2016, with his Vice President Joe Biden championing it, the programme promised to transform cancer care — accelerating research, delivering new treatments, and saving lives. Touted as a bold mission to achieve 10 years of progress in just five, it secured over $2 billion in funding. Biden made it a personal crusade, reviving and expanding the initiative during his presidency. Nearly a decade later, the results are meagre. Announcements were made and papers published, but little came of this.

In sharp contrast, India is demonstrating what true health care innovation looks like — with a fraction of the resources. Karkinos Healthcare, a private venture I have mentored and advised, set out to revolutionise cancer care with just $100 million in investor funding — a sum that would barely register in US health care budgets. And in just four years — less than the Moonshot's original timeline — Karkinos has built a nationwide cancer care network that delivers measurable, life-saving results at a scale the US programme could only dream of.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Hindustan Times Delhi

Hindustan Times

Google says it has developed quantum computing algorithm in breakthrough

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time to read

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Hindustan Times

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1 min

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Hindustan Times

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time to read

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time to read

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Hindustan Times

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time to read

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Hindustan Times

LOW WIND SPEEDS KEEP CAPITAL'S AIR 'VERY POOR'; RELIEF UNLIKELY

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time to read

1 min

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Hindustan Times

IT ministry tightens rules for online content removal

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time to read

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Hindustan Times

Minors can, on reaching adulthood, cancel sale transactions made by guardians, says top court

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time to read

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Hindustan Times

Hindustan Times

Why this season is looking very good for Arsenal so far

Gyökeres ends barren run with a brace as Gunners continue good run by dismantling Atletico

time to read

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Hindustan Times

Private sector can help address urban flooding

The torrential rains across India this monsoon once again exposed the deep vulnerabilities of its cities.

time to read

4 mins

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