Category: Health

  • Ayurveda’s Global Leap: World Ayurveda Day Gets Fixed Date, Focuses on Planetary and Personal Health

    From ancient wisdom to international strategy, Ayurveda’s role in preventive and integrative healthcare gets a calendar milestone with September 23 now set as World Ayurveda Day annually.

    The Ministry of Ayush has announced a significant milestone in the global recognition of Ayurveda by fixing September 23 as the official date for World Ayurveda Day. For the first time since its inception nearly a decade ago, the celebration will no longer shift with the lunar calendar, signaling a pivotal moment for institutional and global engagement with India’s ancient healing tradition.
    This year’s theme, “Ayurveda for People and Planet,” reflects the discipline’s deep connection with sustainable living, preventive health, and ecological balance. Recognized by the World Health Organization as part of its Traditional Medicine Strategy, Ayurveda continues to shape public health systems in over 170 countries.

    Ayurveda is not only an ancient Indian system of medicine, it is a timeless science of life,” said Dr. Tony Nader, neuroscientist and successor to Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. From personalized nutrition and seasonal cleansing to mind body integration, Ayurveda offers practical solutions urgently needed in today’s world.
    The announcement comes at a time of remarkable growth for the global Ayurveda sector. According to Fortune Business Insights, the market was valued at USD 6.7 billion in 2023 and is projected to reach USD 21.1 billion by 2032, growing at a CAGR of 13.3%. This expansion is driven by increasing global demand for integrative health systems and India’s diplomatic and scientific push via the Ministry of Ayush.

    The roots of this resurgence can be traced back to the revival movement led by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in the late 20th century. Collaborating with India’s leading Vaidyas, he emphasized authenticity, scientific validation, and accessibility. His contributions helped restore practices like Nadi Vigyan (pulse diagnosis) and Panchakarma to the global mainstream, while also aligning them with modern healthcare protocols.
    Scientific studies have added credibility to these ancient techniques. Research on Panchakarma therapies has shown tangible detoxification benefits, while Transcendental Meditation, aligned with Ayurvedic philosophy, is now recommended by the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology for managing hypertension.

    As World Ayurveda Day finds its permanent place on the global calendar, India’s traditional knowledge system steps further into the future offering not just remedies, but a blueprint for balanced, holistic living in a fast-paced, modern world.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • Healing Through Colour: BM Birla Heart Hospital Showcases Art by Young Cardiac Patients

    As World Heart Day approaches, BM Birla Heart Hospital transforms its paediatric ward into a gallery of healing, where young cardiac patients express their resilience through heartfelt artwork.

    Crayons and courage have taken centre stage at BM Birla Heart Hospital, where children recovering from complex heart surgeries have turned to art as a means of healing. In a special initiative leading up to World Heart Day, the hospital’s paediatric cardiac ward has been adorned with vibrant sketches created by young patients, each artwork telling a story of recovery, strength, and emotional expression.
    From reminders about healthy habits to depictions of strong hearts, the walls now carry not just colours, but messages of hope.

    Among the young artists is 10-year-old Master Aariyan SK, who underwent surgery under Dr. Kuntal Roychowdhuri. His drawing encourages everyone to “care for our heart.” For Master Aryan Bhagat, also 10, whose recovery was led by Dr. Manoj K. Daga, sports became his theme, illustrating the importance of physical activity. Miss Shweta Devrao Nagrele (12), Miss Nusrat Gazi (9), and Miss Sultana Parvin (12), all treated by Dr. Daga, used their art to spotlight nutritious food, global heart health, and good habits for prevention.

    This initiative allows our young patients to share their journey in a way that words cannot fully capture,” said Supratik DeSarkar, Regional Head – BMB | RBH. Each drawing is a reflection of resilience and their growing understanding of heart health. We are proud to pair world-class cardiac care with emotional and rehabilitative support.
    The hospital’s team of nurses, caregivers, and paediatric specialists sees creativity as part of holistic healing promoting faster recovery through positive engagement and emotional release.

    With its child-focused spaces, dedicated cardiac expertise, and compassionate approach, BM Birla Heart Hospital continues to lead paediatric cardiac care in Eastern India, setting new standards in recovery through empathy, innovation, and inclusion.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • From Hazard to Health: Sintex Launches SMART Tank Made with 100% Virgin Plastic in Hyderabad

    Economically priced and space-efficient, the new tank sets a benchmark for safe, sustainable, and health-conscious water storage across Indian homes.

    In a significant move to redefine safe water storage for Indian households, Sintex, part of Welspun World, has launched its new ‘SMART’ Tank in Hyderabad. Unlike most market options that often use recycled plastic, the SMART Tank is built with 100% food-grade virgin plastic, addressing rising concerns over toxic contamination from low-grade materials.

    While recycled plastic tanks may be cheaper, they often pose serious health hazards due to the release of chemicals like BPA, phthalates, and formaldehyde, which are linked to illnesses such as cancer, fertility issues, and respiratory problems. Sintex aims to steer the conversation from just durability and price to health and hygiene.
    The SMART Tank’s unique tall design ensures space efficiency without compromising capacity, making it ideal for apartments, compact homes, educational institutions, and commercial spaces. It is available in 500L, 750L, and 1000L variants and can be purchased via Sintex’s dealer network in Hyderabad.

    “Our aim is to provide durable, hygienic, and reliable water storage that meets modern needs while prioritising consumer health,” said Yashovardhan Agarwal, MD, Welspun BAPL Ltd and Director, Sintex. “The SMART Tank is another step toward building a water-secure and health-positive future for Indian households.”

    This launch aligns with Sintex’s broader commitment to water security and public health through its ‘Saaf, Safe, Sahi’ philosophy clean, safe, and the right choice for families. As India becomes increasingly aware of hidden environmental and health risks, Sintex’s SMART Tank offers a compelling, future-ready alternative.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • Safe Shelter, Stronger Recovery: Mondelez India Backs Child Cancer Families at St. Jude ACTREC Facility

    ACTREC’s new 12-storey facility will serve over 700 families annually, with Mondelez-backed units providing free stay, nutrition, and counselling.

    In a significant gesture of corporate social responsibility, Mondelez India has extended its long-standing partnership with St. Jude India ChildCare Centres by supporting two new residential units at ACTREC, Tata Memorial Centre’s Navi Mumbai campus.
    These newly inaugurated units are part of India’s largest pediatric cancer care accommodation facility, a 12-storey building that will provide holistic support to over 700 families every year. Each family will receive not only free residential accommodation, but also nutrition support, transport to hospitals, education for siblings, and counselling services essential enablers for uninterrupted treatment.

    St. Jude’s “Home Away from Home” model addresses a critical gap in India’s cancer care ecosystem: access to safe, hygienic, and affordable accommodation for children undergoing long-term cancer treatment in metropolitan hospitals. This becomes especially crucial for families traveling from smaller towns with limited financial resources.
    Mondelez India’s contribution ensures that two full residential units are available free of cost to families during the child’s treatment phase. These units are equipped with safe cooking facilities, sanitation, and psycho-social care infrastructure allowing patients and caregivers to focus on healing without logistical burdens.

    “This is about more than just shelter. It’s about dignity, care, and emotional strength for families navigating the hardest phase of their lives,” said a senior spokesperson at Mondelez India. “We are honoured to play a small role in their journey toward recovery.”
    The ACTREC centre, inaugurated recently, is now the largest facility operated by St. Jude India. With this expansion, St. Jude reinforces its mission to provide comprehensive care not just to the patient, but to the entire family unit so that financial or geographic barriers never stand in the way of treatment.

    Mondelez India has been associated with St. Jude India since 2015, supporting thousands of families through donations, volunteering, and awareness programs.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • Bringing Big-City Screening to Small Towns: Fujifilm Powers Mammography Access in Nizamabad

    The new AMULET Innovality system marks a milestone in early breast cancer screening access for Tier II India.

    In a move set to significantly enhance women’s health diagnostics in Tier II India, Fujifilm India has installed its flagship AMULET Innovality mammography system at Vishwam Diagnostics in Nizamabad. This installation is part of Fujifilm’s broader commitment to bridge the diagnostic access gap between urban and non-urban India, especially in the realm of early breast cancer detection.
    The AMULET Innovality is one of the most advanced Full-Field Digital Mammography (FFDM) systems available globally. Known for its high-resolution imaging, low radiation dosage, and 3D tomosynthesis capabilities, it delivers precision imaging that is critical for early and accurate breast cancer diagnosis. Its integration into Vishwam Diagnostics now enables women in and around Nizamabad to access mammography quality that was previously available only in metro cities.

    Why This Matters
    Breast cancer is the most common cancer among Indian women, with recent data from the National Cancer Registry Programme estimating over 1.5 lakh new cases annually. Early detection remains the single most effective strategy in reducing mortality, but access to timely and accurate mammography screening has remained a challenge outside India’s metros.
    This collaboration between Fujifilm India and Vishwam Diagnostics directly responds to this gap.
    “Access to advanced imaging technology should not be a privilege limited to big cities,” said Koji Wada, Managing Director of Fujifilm India. “Our partnership with Vishwam Diagnostics is aligned with our commitment to expand healthcare access across India’s Tier II and Tier III regions.”

    Inside the Technology: AMULET Innovality
    Developed in Japan and refined for global screening needs, the AMULET Innovality includes:

    • 3D Breast Tomosynthesis: Offers layered imaging, making it easier to identify masses in dense breast tissue.

    • Faster Scanning Times: Reduces compression duration and improves patient comfort.

    • Low Dose Technology: Adheres to global radiation safety norms, crucial for repeat screenings.

    • Flexible Patient Positioning: Designed for diverse body types, improving image accuracy.

    “Precision, comfort, and confidence, that’s what this system brings to our patients,” said a senior radiologist from Vishwam Diagnostics. “We are proud to now offer Nizamabad the same imaging quality found in hospitals in cities like Hyderabad, Mumbai, or Delhi.”

    Expanding Fujifilm’s Vision in Preventive Healthcare
    Fujifilm India has been steadily expanding its healthcare technology footprint across India, with special attention to breast health. This installation is part of its ‘Find It Early, Fight It Early’ initiative, focused on equipping diagnostic centres with high-precision tools and training support.
    The installation at Vishwam Diagnostics also represents a decentralization of health infrastructure, making advanced diagnostics available at the first point of care, rather than forcing patients to travel hundreds of kilometers.
    “This is not just a machine upgrade, it’s a shift in healthcare access, especially for women in smaller towns,” noted a senior member of Fujifilm’s medical systems division. “With every installation, we’re rewriting the geography of diagnosis.”

    About the Partners
    Fujifilm India is the Indian arm of Fujifilm Holdings Corporation, a global leader in imaging, healthcare, and optical devices. The company has made significant inroads into digital radiography, endoscopy, and AI-enabled diagnostic imaging over the past decade in India.
    Vishwam Diagnostics, based in Nizamabad, is one of the region’s fastest-growing diagnostic centres, offering pathology, radiology, and specialty scanning services. The addition of the AMULET Innovality system is expected to draw patients not only from Nizamabad but also neighboring districts in Telangana and parts of Maharashtra.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • Tata Elxsi and Bayer Join Forces in Pune to Develop Next-Generation Radiology Devices

    A strategic collaboration to design and build precision-driven radiology systems focused on molecular imaging from Tata Elxsi’s Pune centre, powering Bayer’s global healthcare roadmap.

    In a move that strengthens India’s role in global medical engineering, Tata Elxsi has launched a dedicated technology centre in Pune to support Bayer’s radiology innovations. This centre will work on the engineering and development of advanced imaging devices, with a specific focus on molecular imaging technologies.
    The facility is part of a deeper collaboration between the two companies to streamline the journey from concept to clinic. Rather than functioning as a support office, the Pune centre will lead product design, digital integration, and development for radiology hardware used across global markets. Bayer, a leading healthcare enterprise, is investing in this initiative to enhance diagnostic accuracy, clinical safety, and market readiness through smarter and faster development cycles.

    Tata Elxsi brings to the table its expertise in product engineering, software development, and AI-led digital platforms. For Bayer, this collaboration allows for accelerated timelines and broader access to innovation talent. Both companies have highlighted the partnership’s focus on regulatory compliance, usability, and medical safety essential in healthcare product engineering.

    This initiative reflects a larger trend where India is no longer just a delivery hub but a strategic base for life sciences R&D. The Pune centre will support development work for international markets, including Europe and North America, where Bayer has a strong footprint in radiology.

    The partnership aims not only to build devices but to shorten the distance between patient needs and product design. By combining Bayer’s domain expertise with Tata Elxsi’s technical depth, the centre will work on making medical imaging more intelligent, accessible, and future-ready.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • When Power Meets Pressure: Streffie by Solh Wellness Shows Real-Time Stress at POWERGEN 2025

    As 62% of attendees registered high stress levels, Solh Wellness introduced real-time emotional analytics through its Streffie kiosk, redefining engagement at the POWERGEN India summit.

    At the heart of India’s premier power and energy summit, where experts debated grid resiliency, carbon neutrality, and smart energy infrastructure, an unexpected force quietly transformed how attendees understood pressure within themselves. Amid the noise of POWERGEN India 2025 and its co-located expos at Yashobhoomi IICC Dwarka, a sleek, touch-screen kiosk quietly collected biometric data from conference delegates. The device, Streffie, developed by Indian wellness innovator Solh Wellness, recorded the unspoken tensions of the summit’s human participants in real time. The numbers it delivered were impossible to ignore.

    Data collected from over 600 delegates revealed that 62.1% exhibited high stress levels, 35.7% moderate, and 2.2% very high. This real-time emotional snapshot reframed the power conversation entirely reminding leaders, policymakers, and technologists that the transition to clean energy cannot exclude the emotional climate of those driving it. Streffie wasn’t a sideshow or digital gimmick. It was a human mirror.
    In a summit known for showcasing innovations in hydrogen energy, battery storage, and electric mobility, Streffie became an unlikely center of gravity for emotional truth. Delegates stepped up, pressed the button, and within seconds, were handed an insight more powerful than product specs or policy briefs: their own stress level. This wasn’t designed for spectacle. It was designed for awareness. And it worked.

    The idea behind Streffie was conceptualized by Kapil Gupta, Founder and CEO of Solh Wellness, a digital-first mental health platform rooted in real-time diagnostics and proactive wellness tools. His philosophy is simple stress is no longer invisible, and it shouldn’t be treated like a private inconvenience. As he puts it, “When industries count kilowatts, they often forget the kilohertz of the heart.” Gupta’s platform combines emotional intelligence and data science to deliver scalable, measurable tools for mental health resilience in workspaces, campuses, and public forums.

    Streffie’s installation at POWERGEN India 2025 marked the first time the device was used in a global energy event. Hosted by Iten Media, the organizers of Indian Utility Week and Bharat Electricity Expo, the summit attracted policymakers, engineers, utility leaders, and global researchers all deeply invested in India’s decarbonization journey. While high-stakes conversations about policy, pricing, and production filled panel rooms, Streffie offered an entirely different kind of keynote one based on physiological data and introspection.

    Unlike VR booths or interactive dashboards, the Streffie experience stood out for its simplicity. A user approached the kiosk, held a sensor pad, and watched a live diagnostic generate a stress score using biometrics like heart rate variability and skin conductivity. The results weren’t stored with names, ensuring privacy, but were aggregated to create a broader map of emotional wellbeing across the summit floor. That map told a story that even the most polished keynote speeches could not.

    What made Streffie more than just a health booth was its integration into the psychology of event experience. Rather than treating attendees as passive consumers of content, it engaged them as active participants in their own wellbeing. Visitors reported feeling “seen” not in a performative sense, but in a way that forced self-awareness amid industry pressure. While most events offer swag bags and coffee counters, Streffie offered a reality check. And the takeaway wasn’t just a report, it was a question: how are we feeling as we build the future?

    The stress metrics collected aligned with what the World Health Organization has already warned about: over one billion people globally are navigating anxiety, burnout, or depressive symptoms. Stress has become one of the top three contributors to long-term disability worldwide. In high-performance sectors like power and infrastructure where engineering demands, regulatory pressure, and innovation cycles collide mental load is often background noise. Streffie made it the headline.
    Solh Wellness has already deployed versions of Streffie in corporate campuses, academic institutions, and government offices. The POWERGEN deployment was unique in that it turned a large-scale industry summit into a real-time lab of emotional analytics. And yet, it did so without spectacle. There was no call for applause. No celebrity endorsement. Just data, empathy, and silence.

    Looking forward, Streffie could become a permanent fixture in high-pressure environments summits, airports, universities, and even election rallies. Solh Wellness is exploring integrations into post-event dashboards, where anonymized stress data could help organizers understand how audience fatigue unfolds hour by hour. Custom modules may allow brands to offer recovery tools in-app meditation guides, micro-therapy prompts, or gamified challenges like “Beat Your Stress Score.” What began as a kiosk could evolve into a feedback loop where event wellness is not a sideline, but a metric of success.

    Streffie’s deployment at POWERGEN 2025 was made possible by the vision of Iten Media, which continues to push the boundaries of what power sector engagement can look like. While other expos leaned into heavy tech demonstrations, Iten made space for a softer, subtler story: the wellbeing of the people powering the grid. That decision quiet, intentional, and courageousdeserves its own spotlight. In a field often dominated by performance benchmarks and project financing, Streffie’s quiet presence reminded all stakeholders that resilience is as human as it is electrical.
    The success of Streffie at POWERGEN is also a signal to event organizers worldwide that wellbeing activations can no longer be treated as wellness “corners.” They are central to experience. Just as carbon dashboards and load forecasts are shared on large displays, emotional feedback loops deserve public stage space normalized, not hidden. This is where Solh Wellness plans to make its next move towards transforming real-time stress visibility into a cultural baseline.
    Prittle Prattle News, Featuring You Virtuously, is proud to feature this powerful shift toward purposeful engagement. We believe that innovation isn’t only about what we build, but how we feel while building it.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • Hyderabad’s first TEER heart procedure with indigenously developed MyClip device restores 70-year-old patient’s health

    Performed at Gleneagles Hospital by Dr. Sai Sudhakar, the minimally invasive repair marks the first use of Meril Life Sciences’ Made-in-India valve clip system in Telugu states, offering a cost-effective alternative to imported devices

    In a breakthrough moment for cardiac care in the Telugu states, a 70-year-old patient has successfully undergone a Transcatheter Edge-to-Edge Repair (TEER) procedure at Gleneagles Hospital, Hyderabad, using an indigenously developed heart valve clip called MyClip.
    The procedure, led by Dr. Sai Sudhakar, Senior Consultant Interventional Cardiologist, marks the first time the MyClip system has been used in Hyderabad and Telangana. Developed by Meril Life Sciences, MyClip is designed to repair leaking mitral valves without the need for open-heart surgery.

    Doctors explained that the patient had been suffering from severe mitral regurgitation, a condition in which the heart’s mitral valve does not close properly, causing blood to leak backward. Traditional surgery was considered too risky due to age and other health complications, making TEER the preferred option.
    By deploying MyClip through a minimally invasive catheter-based technique, the medical team was able to repair the valve and restore normal blood flow. The patient recovered without complications and was discharged within days, according to hospital officials.

    The TEER technique itself has been in use globally for more than a decade, but until recently it relied on expensive imported devices. With MyClip, India now has its own cost-effective, Made-in-India alternative, which experts say could make advanced cardiac interventions accessible to a wider population.
    Speaking about the case, Dr. Sai Sudhakar said the procedure represents a significant advance for patients in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. He added that having an indigenous option not only reduces costs but also demonstrates the maturity of India’s medical device ecosystem.

    Industry observers noted that the MyClip procedure in Hyderabad highlights the growing role of Indian-made medical technologies in reducing dependency on imports and making advanced healthcare more affordable.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.

  • CARE Hospitals Turns to Tech Mahindra to Build a 24×7 Patient Access Hub in Hyderabad

    The centre will give callers help in multiple languages, use integrated scheduling systems, and aims to reduce the waiting and confusion patients often face

    For many patients in India, the first challenge is not the treatment itself but getting through to the hospital. Calls go unanswered, information is fragmented, and language remains a barrier. To address this gap, CARE Hospitals has opened a round-the-clock call centre in Hyderabad, developed in partnership with Tech Mahindra.
    The facility is designed to work like a single gateway for anyone trying to reach CARE’s network. Staffed and supported by Tech Mahindra’s business operations team, it will field large call volumes daily and connect patients directly to appointment scheduling, service information, and emergency support.

    One of the key features is language access. The centre is set up to respond in ten Indian languages, making it easier for callers from different states to interact without confusion. The system is also linked to customer-relationship management software and scheduling tools, which means that once a patient speaks to an agent, the request can be logged and acted upon without repeat calls.

    CARE Hospitals leaders said the hub is not only about answering phones but about rethinking how patients experience their first interaction with the hospital. By moving to a centralised model, the group hopes to cut down on waiting times, reduce missed connections, and build trust through consistent service. Tech Mahindra’s role is to provide the technology and operational support that allows the model to run at scale.

    The opening in Hyderabad is being seen as a pilot for how large hospital groups might professionalise patient access in India. If successful, the model could be replicated in other locations where demand is high and communication gaps are common.
    For patients, the promise is simple: a voice at the other end of the line, available day and night, ready to provide clear information in a familiar language. For CARE, it is a chance to show that accessibility is now as central to healthcare as clinical expertise.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube.
  • For 37 Years, Apollo Hospitals Hyderabad Has Been Synonymous with Trust, Care, and Medical Firsts

    Marking its anniversary, leaders including Sangita Reddy and Tejesvi Rao Veerepalli reflected on Apollo’s journey from a pioneering hospital to a centre where technology and compassion work side by side

     Thirty-seven years ago, when Apollo Hospitals opened its doors in Hyderabad, it was among the first private healthcare institutions in India to imagine that world-class treatment could be accessible at home, without patients having to travel abroad. Today, the hospital stands as a fixture in the city’s collective memory – a place associated not just with medical milestones but with trust built across generations.
    Over the decades, Apollo Hyderabad has introduced several innovations – from advanced imaging and robotic surgery to organ transplantation and preventive health programmes while also shaping the idea that healthcare must combine compassion with technology. Its anniversary was therefore not only about looking back but about recognising a relationship with the city that has endured across families, doctors, and patients.

    Speaking at the occasion, Sangita Reddy, Joint Managing Director of Apollo Hospitals, said that the hospital’s story is inseparable from the community it serves. She noted that Hyderabad’s growth as a centre of science and medicine has been tied to Apollo’s ability to introduce new standards of care and inspire confidence in millions of patients.

    Tejesvi Rao Veerepalli, Vice President of Apollo Hospitals Hyderabad, added that longevity in healthcare is not measured only in years but in the lives touched. He highlighted the dedication of long-serving doctors, nurses, and staff who have carried the institution’s culture of empathy and excellence forward.

    The anniversary celebrations included recognition of employees who have been with the hospital through much of its journey, underscoring the idea that Apollo’s legacy lies as much in its people as in its technology.
    As Apollo Hospitals Hyderabad moves into its 38th year, it remains at the intersection of tradition and innovation – combining state-of-the-art infrastructure with the simple promise of care that began nearly four decades ago.
    At Prittle Prattle News, we honor your dedication and inventiveness led by showcasing you in a positive light. Under the direction of Editor-in-Chief Smruti Bhalerao, our platform is committed to disseminating powerful narratives that raise awareness and motivate change. For more important stories, follow us on LinkedInInstagram, and YouTube