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Caare: Bringing Professional Medical Care When it is Needed the Most

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Chandramouli,  Founder

Chandramouli

Founder

In recent years, the telemedicine industry has grown significantly. It facilitates communication between patients and doctors over distances and may help lower healthcare costs. These benefits have hospitals and doctors eager to incorporate digital health technologies into their practices. The government has also been prompted by this to create rules and reimbursement procedures related to telehealth. Due to advancements in the telemedicine sector, everyone now has access to cheap healthcare. New business and healthcare models centered on telehealth have emerged as a result of the rise in specialties including cardiology, behavioral health, and others. With the introduction of numerous platforms and the entry of new competitors with significant financial resources, the industry is progressively becoming quite competitive.

Caare is dedicated to providing top-notch patient care and support, supported by a network of skilled healthcare partners. The core of its strategy for offering high-quality care is its commitment to delivering a level of knowledge, training, patient service, and monitoring that is challenging to match in its industry. The startup aims to provide primary health care directly to Elderly & Rural communities in their homes.

Caare is a platform that focuses mostly on rural healthcare and is NHA-approved and


ABDMW accredited. It has developed a triage protocol to screen patients seeking online services that are necessary to prevent underestimating the severity of illness, sort patients to places of service, and decide if there is a need to escalate to an in person evaluation or higher level of care, primarily in rural areas. With its streamlined mobile app, Caare ensures that everyone has access to high-quality healthcare, regardless of where they live, by serving as a crucial link between rural patients and specialized physicians in the metropolis. Further, by putting into practice this cutting-edge strategy, the company can work to bridge the gap between urban and rural health services, ensuring a better and healthier future for everybody. Caare delivers its SaaS-based solution to clinics and hospitals on a subscription basis, as well as offering a franchise model to pharmacies and diagnostic centers in rural areas. It also collaborates with Foundations and Corporates on CSR projects.

Caare simplifies virtual health services for communities that have the greatest need but also the least access


Most Indians, nearly 70 percent live in small rural communities. With a streamlined solution that can be brought right up to the door of rural communities, the company will be able to access rural and tribal areas because of its creative triage approach. This model has the potential to develop into a full-service telemedicine platform. In contrast to traditional telemedicine, when the patient speaks with the doctor directly, in the Caare model, the patient receives assistance from a local health professional. With the help of service providers including pharmacies and diagnostic facilities as well as a few significant healthcare foundations, the company has effectively implemented its strategy. The state of Karnataka is evaluating Caare's telemedicine-based healthcare solutions for tribal communities.

In addition, Caare will provide rural health professionals with a streamlined mobile app so they may act as a link between rural patients and city-based specialist doctors. The company has developed streamlined technology to make it simple for the health personnel in the villages to use the App. Through making impact investments and CSR donations, it consistently focuses on developing new solutions to meet the needs of underserved populations. “We will soon be improving our platform with a software-only, AIpowered, video-based solution that will make it simple for anyone in need of real-time health data to extract a variety of health indicators from mobile devices and laptops with end-user consent”, concludes Chandramouli.