Seychelles Boosts Healthcare with India's SIMS Hospital During Presidential Visit

Seychelles President Patrick Herminie and Health Minister Marvin Nolan Fanny met with SIMS Hospital Chairman Ravi Pachamuthu to chart a collaborative healthcare roadmap. The partnership focuses on sustainable solutions like super-specialty medical camps, digital health integration, and hospital infrastructure development. A team from SIMS Hospital will soon travel to evaluate the existing healthcare systems in Seychelles and Mauritius. Key initiatives include expanding dialysis services, ensuring affordable medicine supply, and strengthening the local healthcare workforce through recruitment and training.

Key Points: Seychelles-India Healthcare Partnership Strengthened

  • Super-specialty medical outreach camps
  • National digital healthcare network
  • Affordable medicine supply & inventory
  • Hospital infrastructure modernization
  • Dialysis service expansion
3 min read

SIMS Hospital strengthens healthcare partnership with Seychelles during President Herminie's India visit

Seychelles President Patrick Herminie meets SIMS Hospital Chairman to advance super-specialty care, digital health, and dialysis services.

"Partnerships that support infrastructure, digital health, trained workforce, and specialised services such as dialysis are important steps towards long-term healthcare capacity building in Seychelles. - Patrick Herminie"

Chennai, February 7

President of Seychelles Patrick Herminie and Marvin Nolan Fanny, Minister of Health, Seychelles, met Ravi Pachamuthu, Chairman, SIMS Hospital, to discuss a collaborative roadmap aimed at strengthening healthcare services in Seychelles through sustainable and long-term healthcare solutions such as super-specialty medical outreach, hospital infrastructure development, digital health integration, workforce support, affordable medicines, and dialysis expansion.

A team of specialists from SIMS Hospital is to travel to Mauritius and Seychelles next week to evaluate the existing healthcare systems in Seychelles and assess the way forward in coordination with the Ministry of Health.

As part of the discussion, it was also proposed to establish periodic super-speciality medical camps for patients accessing the Seychelles Government Healthcare System, aimed at enhancing diagnostic accuracy and improving clinical outcomes through advanced medical technology, while building local capacity and strengthening the Ministry of Health's clinical capabilities to position Seychelles as a regional healthcare leader within the East African zone.

The discussion focused on key areas, including the development of an integrated, real-time national digital healthcare network connecting all health centres and hospitals nationwide to improve patient data management, referrals, clinical decision-making, transparency, and service delivery.

It also covered the supply of high-quality, cost-effective pharmaceuticals and medical products, supported by the implementation of a cloud-based, real-time inventory management system across pharmacy stores to reduce stock-outs, wastage, and procurement inefficiencies, along with periodic outreach super-specialty medical camps, hospital infrastructure development, healthcare workforce strengthening through nurse recruitment, and the expansion of dialysis services to improve accessibility and continuity of care for renal patients.

The meeting also focused on providing technical advisory support for the modernisation of existing government hospital infrastructure, the planning and development of new hospitals and primary healthcare facilities, and the adoption of global best practices in hospital design, patient safety, and operational efficiency.

In addition, healthcare workforce support was achieved through the recruitment and deployment of qualified nursing professionals, leveraging SRM's proven education ecosystem and supporting skills transfer and long-term capacity building for local healthcare staff.

The meeting also discussed expanding dialysis services by strengthening the existing dialysis unit with satellite support services, ensuring round-the-clock specialist assistance and improving accessibility and continuity of care for renal patients.

In his comments, Patrick Herminie, President of the Republic of Seychelles, said, "Our focus is to strengthen public healthcare services and ensure access to quality care for all citizens. Partnerships that support infrastructure, digital health, trained workforce, and specialised services such as dialysis are important steps towards long-term healthcare capacity building in Seychelles."

Speaking about the meeting, Ravi Pachamuthu, Chairman, SIMS Hospital, India, said, "Healthcare collaboration must focus on strengthening systems from infrastructure and trained professionals to digital networks and affordable access to medicines. We are honoured to engage with the Honourable President and explore opportunities that can contribute to sustainable healthcare capacity for Seychelles."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Fantastic initiative! The focus on digital health integration and real-time networks is the future. If they can implement a system like that in Seychelles, I hope our own government takes notes for better healthcare data management in rural India too.
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Aman W
While this international collaboration is commendable, I hope SIMS and other top private hospitals also focus on making super-specialty care more affordable and accessible within India. Our own tier-2 and tier-3 cities need this kind of infrastructure development and outreach camps desperately.
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Sarah B
The part about workforce support and nurse recruitment is key. India has a surplus of skilled medical professionals. This creates valuable employment opportunities abroad while helping another country build capacity. A true win-win partnership.
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Karthik V
Dialysis expansion is a critical need everywhere. If the model they develop for affordable dialysis services in Seychelles is successful, it should be replicated in Indian government hospitals. The cost of renal care is a huge burden for middle-class families here.
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Meera T
Great to see a focus on sustainable solutions and not just a one-off camp. Building local capacity through training and technology transfer is how you create lasting impact. This is how India should engage with friendly nations in the Indian Ocean region.

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