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Stryker misses quarter estimates due to muted demand for medical products


Bengaluru – U.S. medical equipment maker Stryker, which makes joint replacements and medical implants for broken bones, missed Wall Street’s estimates for the first-quarter revenue and profit. This was a result of softer demand for devices and implants used in complex surgeries ranging from orthopedics to spinal surgery. The company that makes medical implants and joint replacements to repair broken bone, has reiterated their expectations for an adjusted annual profit of between $14.90 and $15.10 per shares. Stocks of the firm were down by 1.8% during extended trading. Handala, an Iranian hacking group, claimed responsibility in March for a cyberattack that caused Stryker to lose access to its systems, and delayed certain surgeries. couldn’t verify claims made by employees and contractors that the logo peared on their login page. Stryker is a major competitor of Zimmer Biomet and Johnson & Johnson on the orthopedic market. The three companies compete for market shares in segments like hip replacements, sports medicine, trauma, etc. Stryker’s largest division, medical surgery, and neurotechnology saw its sales increase 5%, to $3.21 billion, in the first quarter. However, this was below analysts’ expectations of $3.83.

Sales in the orthopedics segment increased 6.3% to $2.81 Billion, beating analysts’ expectations. Data compiled by LSEG shows that the Michigan company’s total revenue was $6.02 billion in the quarter ended on March 31, which is below analysts’ expectations of $6.6 billion. Stryker’s adjusted earnings per share were $2.60, which was below the $2.98 estimate. (Reporting from Padmanabhan Ananthan, Bengaluru. Editing by Tasim Zaid)
Published on May 1, 2026, at 7:12 AM (IST)


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ET has multiple sources that confirm Siemens Healthineers’ intention to exit American Oncology Institute in Hyderabad. The hospital chain is valued at around Rs 1,500-2,000 crore. Siemens has been advised on the deal by Alvarez & Marsal Investment Bank. The sources cited said several private equity firms have been approached. Healthcare Global Enterprises (HCG), a KKR backed listed cancer care network, has also been sounded as a bidder. The sale could be part of a broader discussion about Siemens Healthineers’ strategic direction. Bloomberg reported in 2013 that the company was in preliminary talks with major private-equity firms, such as Blackstone, CVC Capital Partners or KKR about a possible deal to sell its global diagnostics division. This could have been worth over $6 billion. Cancer Treatment Services International operated AOI, founded in 2012 by a team of doctors and industry professionals. CTSI was purchased by Varian Medical Systems from TPG Growth in 2019. Siemens Healthineers will acquire Varian in 2021 and bring AOI into its portfolio. According to sources, Siemens views AOI as a non core asset and has no plans to continue operating it in India. Both Siemens and HCG declined comment on this development. Siemens Healthineers focuses primarily on diagnostic imaging (including MRIs and CT scans), lab diagnostics, therapeutic images, and digital solutions. The company operates two production facilities in India – one for diagnostics in Vadodara and another for medical imaging in Bengaluru.

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Sources say MyFitnessPal, a health and fitness app, is considering a sale.


New York – The owner of MyFitnessPal, whose private equity firm owns the plication, is looking at valuing it over $1 billion. Four sources who are familiar with the situation have confirmed this. Francisco Partners, who bought MyFitnessPal in 2020 from Under Armour, is working closely with JPMorgan to complete the sale, according to sources. They requested anonymity due the nature of the matter. The demand for digital health and wellness tools has risen in recent years. This is reflected in the increased adoption of ps, such as MyFitnessPal. ple Health and Peloton p One. Wearable devices, such as Oura ring, have also been popularized. reported in 2013 that fitness platform Strava had been exploring an IPO. JPMorgan, Francisco Partners and

declined to make any comments. MyFitnessPal didn’t immediately respond to an inquiry for comment. MyFitnessPal (founded in 2005) was sold by Under Armour to Under Armour, Inc. in 2015 for $475,000,000. Francisco Partners purchased it in 2020 for $345m, with potential payments based on performance targets. MyFitnessPal lets users track their calories, vitamins, weight, exercise, and more. It also offers meal plans, recipes, on-demand videos, and other features. The p is available for free, but there is also a premium version that costs $24.99 a month or $99.99 upfront.

The company reported last year that it had more than 280 million users in 120 countries.

Published at 07:32 am IST on ril 10, 2026

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Park Medi World acquires Medicity Hospital Rudrapur and enters Uttarakhand.


New Delhi – Hospital chain Park Medi World Ltd announced on Monday that it would acquire 100% of The Medicity Hospital Rudrur’s outstanding shares in a cash transaction worth Rs 177 crore. This acquisition marks Park Group’s entry into Uttarakhand and expands its presence to a sixth state. The Medicity Hospital in Rudrur is a multi-super specialty healthcare institution that has 330 beds. Park Medi World said that the acquisition was in line with its growth strategy which aims to maximize operational synergies, achieve economies of size through strategic deployments of assets, and maximised potential, underserved market. Dr Ankit Gupta is the Managing Director of Park Medi World Limited. He said: “This acquisition marks an important milestone in our strategic quest to build a pan-North India healthcare system that is world-class”.

Published on May 26, 2026, at 7:36 AM (IST)

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Mobile app to improve clinical workflow for community health officers.


New Delhi – In a major move towards strengthening primary care delivery and enhancing digital services, the Union Health Ministry launched on Monday a dedicated plication to support and streamline clinical workflows of community healthcare officers (CHOs). The Indian Council of Medical Research developed the mobile plication to provide CHOs with a comprehensive tool for clinical decision-making and job-aid. The ministry stated that the plication was designed to align with the expanded 12 service packages of Comprehensive Primary Health Care.

This plication offers structured clinical workflows which serve as quick-reference lists for patients who attend outpatient services in SC-AAMs. It provides step-by-step practical guidance for patient assessment including history taking and physical examination as well as relevant diagnostic tests based on complaints. The statement said that through these workflows the CHOs can quickly identify cases that require immediate referral to higher level emergency care facilities.

This plication guides pre-referral care to stabilise the patient. The statement stated that it supported clinical decision-making in non-emergency situations by providing recommendations for propriate management to SC-AAMs or referral pathways, as well as teleconsultations with higher centers.

This plication is divided into three sections: Workflows, Assessment Tools, and Treat and Counsel. To simplify clinical decision making, a colour-coded scheme has been implemented: Red (indicates potential immediate threats to life or organs and requires urgent referral); orange (suggests need for specialist or doctor evaluation); yellow (covers moderate to mild conditions manageable by SC-AAMs without or with teleconsultation); green (denotes healthy or mild cases that can be handled at the facility). The plication includes key features, such as electronic health records, teleconsultation, diagnostic reporting, follow-up , and patient registration. The statement also said that it allows seamless integration with national digital health platforms to ensure continuity of care and improve health outcomes. Dr V K Paul highlighted the crucial role primary healthcare plays in the strengthening of the overall health system. He stressed that primary healthcare is the basis of any nation’s health architecture. India’s progress towards universal healthcare coverage, he said, is strongly anchored in strong primary healthcare systems.

He noted that this plication was developed at the same time as the Ayushman Arogya mandir initiative completed eight years, which is a significant milestone. He was pleased that the digital tool would be available to all community health officers in the country.

He preciated the systematic proach and evidence-based methodology adopted by the team of developers, and also stressed the importance to incorporate continuous feedback mechanisms for further refining and strengthening the plication. He emphasized the need to incorporate artificial intelligence (AI), stating that these advancements would enhance the platform’s utility, improve the clinical decision-making, and elevate the overall level of healthcare service provision. Dr Rajiv Bhal, Secretary and Director General of ICMR, said that the launch marks an important step in the journey to strengthen digital clinical support for primary healthcare. He stressed that the plication would continue to develop based on feedback from community health officers, other stakeholders and its use in the field.

The team leader praised the collaborative efforts of everyone involved in the project, from its conception to its evaluation. He noted that iterative and collaborative proaches are vital for creating robust digital health solutions that focus on the user. Dr Bahl reiterated ICMR’s commitment to continually improving the tool in order to better serve frontline healthcare providers, and improve service delivery outcomes. This evidence-based tool will enhance the quality and consistency of the care provided at the primary level while providing CHOs with access to standardised clinical protocol. PTI-

Published on r 14, 2026, at 7:11 PM (IST)


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Medical info presented by chatbots incorrect, incomplete: Study.


New Delhi. An analysis of five chatbots’ responses has revealed that an important amount of medical information

is inaccurate and incomplete. The study, which was published in The British Medical Journal Open, revealed that almost half of the chatbot responses had issues, such as falsely balancing science-based and non-science claims. A problematic response can be defined as a response that may lead lay people to ineffective treatments or cause harm if not followed by professionals. Researchers at the Harbor-University of California Los Angeles, or UCLA, Medical Center, in the US said that while generative AI bots are ridly being adopted by research, marketing and medical centers, with many people using them to search, a continued use without public awareness and oversight may lead to misinformation. Five widely-used generative AI bots — Google’s Gemini and High-Flyer’s DeepSeek; Meta AI by Meta; Open AI’s ChatGPT; and Grok, by xAI -were prompted with ten open-ended or closed-ended questions, grouped into five categories — cancer, stem cell research, nutrition and athletic performance.

The prompts were designed to resemble common ‘information-seeking’ health and medical queries, language used in misinformation online, and in academic discourse. The prompts also were used as a stress test to identify behavioural weaknesses in AI models. They were ”restrained” towards giving incorrect or contraindicated information. The chatbots’ responses were classified into non-problematic (non-scientific), somewhat problematic (non-scientific) and highly problematic (scientific). The authors stated that “the audited chatbots did poorly in answering questions from misinformation-prone medical and health fields”. “Nearly half of the responses (49.6%) were problematic: 30% somewhat problematic and 19,6% highly problematic,” they wrote. Grok generated “significantly higher responses” than expected, according to the researchers. The chatbots performed best in the topics of vaccines and cancer, but not in the topics stem cells, nutrition, or athletic performance. The study found that responses were always presented with confidence, certainty and few disclaimers. The study found that the quality of references was poor with an average score of 40%. Researchers said that chatbots were unable to provide a complete reference list due to fake citations and hallucinations, which create false information. Our findings on scientific accuracy and reference quality as well as response readability point out important limitations in behaviour and the need to reevaluate how AI Chatbots are used for public-facing communication about health and medicine.

By default, chatbots are not able to access real-time information. They generate outputs instead by inferring patterns from their data training and predicting possible word sequences. They cannot weigh evidence or make ethical or values-based judgements.

Published on r 15, 2020 at 03:59 PM I.T.

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Kerala’s healthcare goldrush: How private capital is reshaping hospital and raising concerns over costs


After decades of building St Thomas Hospital, in Malakkara in Pathanamthitta in Kerala, Dr Charlie Cherian has now expressed his fears that the next decade could undo all of it. He fears that the next decade will undo everything he has done. The recent surge in private equity interest in Kerala’s health care market is not due to any of his actions, but rather a group of new investors. Funds such as KKR and Blackstone have collectively invested over $1 billion to buy into hospitals in Kerala within the last three years. The funds are not stopping any time soon. According to sources familiar with the talks, as private equity-driven hospital consolidation gains momentum in India, these funds are proaching multiple multispecialty clinics in the state about potential acquisitions. This is the source of tension in a state renowned for its healthcare. Kerala’s healthcare system is being reshed by the wave of private equity funds. Global investment firms are investing in hospitals throughout the state. They are betting on the fact that chronic illness cases are increasing, and NRIs are spending more money. But the cital influx is also increasing pressure on Kerala’s independent, physician-run hospitals. They are now forced to compete against corporate chains who can spend aggressively on expansion, technology and specialist healthcare. The way private equity transforms Kerala can serve as both a model and a warning for India’s healthcare delivery and costs.

Diagnosis: Anxiety

Kerala occupies an unusual position in Indian healthcare. It is a state that has some of India’s best health outcomes, but also some of its highest medical bills. The National Sample Survey 2022-23’s 79th round shows that hospitalisation costs per household are nearly Rs 9,000 for rural regions and Rs 10000 in urban regions. This is more than twice the national median. Even though there is a large network of government-run hospitals, according to data from the state government, close to 63% of all hospitalisations and three-fourths outpatient care are still handled by private institutions. The need for more healthcare is unfortunately not going to dispear. The Kerala Medical Certification of Cause of Death Report 2024 reveals that cancer and diabetes are the leading causes of death medically certified. Circulatory diseases, or conditions that affect the heart and vessels of blood, are responsible for proximately 27% deaths. More than 41% of deaths hpen in people over 70. Dr Althaf Ali is a professor at Government Medical College Thiruvananthuram, and he says that PE funds pay attention to these numbers. Kerala’s high literacy rate and health awareness combined with a diaspora sending money back home to pay medical bills made it the obvious choice for a destination after the major metros. Rajan VP and MD at Veda Corporate Advisors says, “It’s all about the demand. As long as people will pay, it’s going to be a success.” Robin Alex Panicker a Kerala based entrepreneur says two things are driving PE Cital into the market: “Most of our patients are supported by NRIs.” “Kerala is becoming affluent and has more disposable income,” says Panicker. “There is a key element–the state has earned credibility through its handling of Covid.” The quality of healthcare has not been compromised, but the cost has. The logic was always simple: A large, underinsured populace, chronic underinvestment in public healthcare infrastructure, and an increasing middle class willing to pay more for quality care. The scale and speed of change has increased. In 1996, ollo Hospitals Enterprise pioneered Indian healthcare as a business. Private equity began to catch on in the late 2010s. Funds bought stakes in hospitals chains, Manipal Hospitals or Fortis. The stable cash flows attracted them and they were promised an exit through IPOs or strategic sales. According to the India PE Report 2020 by Bain and Company and Indian Venture and Alternate Cital Association, between 2015 and 2020, PE investments in India focused on healthcare, with transactions totaling several billion dollars. It was accelerated by the pandemic. The pandemic also revealed the hollowness in public health infrastructure. It drove patients to private facilities, and reminded investors of hospitals’ recession-proof status, even when they are facing a crisis. Cital poured in. KKR which manages $760 billion of assets worldwide, acquired a controlling interest in HCG Oncology by 2025. Blackstone is the world’s biggest alternative asset manager, managing more than $1 trillion. They have built a South Indian hospital portfolio, anchored at Quality Care India which operates CARE Hospitals & KIMSHEALTH. Panicker,
, says that the economics is simple: “Operational costs are rising for hospitals.” It doesn’t matter if the infrastructure costs are small or big, they all increase. This creates even more incentive to expand the market. The playbook: Buy, Expand, Exit

PE funds in Indian hospitals are now almost predictable. However, the people who execute them would prefer to call it value creation. Manish Matoo, the CEO of HCG (now owned by KKR), says, “They are looking for a demand/supply mismatch.” They move to fill the g.

There are many entry points. Some funds purchase majority stakes of mid-sized hospitals chains that have strong regional brands, but are limited in cital. Some funds take minority stakes in large networks to provide the necessary firepower for growth. What usually follows are aggressive bed expansions, investments in high-margin medical specialties such as oncology and cardiology, operational efficiency initiatives, and finally an exit through an IPO.

Earlier in the year, KKR made a further investment of about $210 millions into BMH. BMH has acquired a majority stake in Star Hospitals of Hyderabad. Last year, KG Alexander told a newsper in the area that BMH wanted to expand into South India covering Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Telangana. It is a vicious cycle. Once a hospital receives PE funding and expands, others are compelled by the example to do so too.

“It is like the surgical robots of today,” Mattoo says. “A hospital buys one and it’s suddenly a level playing field for all the others.” HCG’s immediate priority is to focus on internal growth. “We must generate cash internally first,” he says. “Improve cash generation, bring about efficiency and then invest this into expansion.” Ali claims that they don’t give a damn about people’s well-being. They are fund managers that invest to get higher returns. “They are fund managers who invest and expect higher returns. He refers to a JAMA 2023 study that examined the private equity purchases of US hospitals from 2009-2019. Study analysed insurance claims for 6.6 lakh hospitalisations from 51 PE-acquired hospital and compared it with data of 41.6 lakh hospitalisations from 259 non-PE-acquired hospital, based on data provided by the US insurance programme Medicare. Study found that hospital acquired conditions such as bloodstream infections and patient falls increased by 25.4% after PE acquisition. This was despite the fact that patient populations were younger and less disadvantaged. The former chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan expressed his concerns about medical inflation at private hospitals in the beginning of this year. Cherian brings up a less obvious concern. “The bigger hospital chains won’t accept government schemes,” says he. This g is important for patients who do not have NRI money. Ali says that we need to be honest about the amount of money that is spent by the government so that it doesn’t fall entirely on private hands. ET’s questions were not answered by Blackstone or KKR.

FIGHTING for the future
The conversation is more immediate for Cherian. The machines are becoming more expensive. Chains are becoming bigger. They are very well funded and they know exactly what they want. He has completely subsumed his life to his practice. He has never been on a holiday abroad, and his only trip was to Bengaluru for work. After watching him work night and day for decades, his children have decided not to pursue a career in medicine. Cherian, despite his personal struggles and corporate pressures, is still determined to resist the PE rush. St Thomas Hospital, which he believes is a passion-driven project, is not going away. “We’ll just have to figure it out.”

– Published May 25, 2026 11:29 AM (IST)

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