Key Points

The NHA and C-DAC have partnered to roll out e-Sushrut@Clinic, a lightweight HMIS for small healthcare providers. This cloud-based system enhances efficiency, data security, and patient care while supporting ABDM’s digital health goals. It simplifies digital adoption for clinics, enabling telemedicine and streamlined diagnostics. The initiative aims to create a nationwide interoperable health ecosystem.

Key Points: e-Sushrut Clinics Boost Digital Health Ecosystem for Doctors

  • ABDM-backed e-Sushrut@Clinic targets small healthcare providers
  • Cloud-based HMIS ensures data security and affordability
  • Supports telemedicine and digitized patient records
  • Aims to bridge digital gaps in private clinics
3 min read

e-Sushrut clinics to empower doctors, create interoperable digital health ecosystem

NHA and C-DAC launch e-Sushrut@Clinic, a cloud-based HMIS to empower doctors and enhance digital healthcare interoperability under ABDM.

"e-Sushrut@Clinic will empower tens of thousands of doctors nationwide, improving efficiency and patient satisfaction. - Punya Salila Srivastava"

New Delhi, Aug 15

The new e-Sushrut@Clinics will empower doctors and help create an interoperable digital health ecosystem, said Union Health Secretary Smt. Punya Salila Srivastava.

The National Health Authority (NHA) and the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to roll out e-Sushrut@Clinic.

e-Sushrut@Clinic provides a lightweight, cloud-based Hospital Management Information System (HMIS) designed specifically for outpatient clinics and is designed specifically for small and medium healthcare providers. It also marks a pivotal step in expanding the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) ecosystem, which aims to support the development of an integrated digital health infrastructure of the country.

“The demand for an affordable government-backed HMIS was persisting for a long time. With CDAC’s collaboration, we expect e-Sushrut@Clinic to empower and cater to tens of thousands of doctors and facility managers nationwide- improving efficiency, data security, and patient satisfaction,” Srivastava said.

“Since the version is ABDM-enabled, it will help in the adoption of ABDM and help create an interoperable digital health ecosystem,” she added.

Recognising that many AIIMS hospitals already successfully use C-DAC’s systems, the e-Sushrut@Clinic was developed to bring the same proven solution and credibility to private stakeholders.

With the official support of the NHA, this initiative provides a secure and reliable platform, addressing a critical need for a trusted Health Management Information System in the private sector.

“This is a great partnership with the National Health Authority, marking an important step toward bringing digital healthcare to the whole country. By simplifying digital adoption for healthcare providers, it will help speed up the creation of a transparent and interconnected digital health ecosystem, ultimately providing faster, more reliable care to patients everywhere,” Vivek Khaneja, Executive Director of C-DAC.

The application developed by C-DAC is a lighter version of their flagship e-Sushrut HMIS software -- currently in use at 17 AIIMS and more than 4,000 health facilities across the country.

Any healthcare provider can onboard the software from his/her laptop/mobile on a webpage through their Health Facility Registry (HFR) and Health Professionals Registry (HPR).

If the healthcare provider is not registered on HFR/HPR, they would be able to register on eSushrut@Clinic itself.

“This will make it much easier for doctors in both public and private clinics to access and update patient health records, offer telemedicine services, and streamline diagnostics and prescriptions. eSushrut@Clinic is tailored for outpatient management, pharmacy, and nursing modules, and delivers essential functionalities at a low per-user cost,” the Ministry of Health said.

The platform enables small clinics, sub-centres, and medium-sized hospitals to digitise patient records, prescriptions, and billing with minimal technical overhead.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Good initiative but I'm concerned about data privacy. With so many cyber attacks happening, how will they protect our medical records? The government needs to be transparent about security measures.
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Arjun K
As a doctor in a small town, I've been waiting for something like this! Managing 100+ patients daily with paper files is a nightmare. If this works as promised, it will save us hours of admin work daily.
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Sarah B
Interoperability is key! If my medical records can seamlessly move between my GP in Delhi and specialist in Bangalore, it would be revolutionary. Hope they've considered regional language support too.
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Kavya N
The real test will be adoption - many older doctors resist technology. Government should provide proper training and support, not just the software. Otherwise it'll be another unused digital initiative.
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Vikram M
Great to see CDAC involved - their track record with AIIMS gives me confidence. But please ensure the system works even with slow internet speeds common in rural areas. Digital India shouldn't just be for cities!
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Nisha Z
Hope they've considered the ground reality - most small clinics don't have dedicated IT staff. The interface needs to be super simple like UPI, otherwise it won't work. Fingers crossed! 🙏

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