Submitted:
23 September 2025
Posted:
25 September 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
Context: The Indian Health System Challenge
Problem: Low Occupancy and Wasted Capacity
Existing Digital Foundations: Feasible Building Blocks
Evidence: Cautious Optimism from Pilots
Proposal: A National Real-Time Bed Dashboard
- ▪
- A real-time occupancy dashboard for administrators: Available to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, state health officials, and hospital managers. It would show current fill-rates, trends, and surge forecasts.
- ▪
- A public-facing availability map or app: This tool would guide emergency services and patients to the nearest available care facility.[25]
- ▪
- Ambulance triage tools: These would integrate emergency response services so that ambulance crews can see available beds and bypass congested sites.[25]
- ▪
- Reporting analytics for policy: Such as identifying chronic under-utilization or over-utilization across regions.
Implementation Plan
Risks and Safeguards
- ▪
- Staffing gaps: Staffing shortages may persist as a binding constraint. While dashboards improve allocation of existing staff, sustained investment in recruitment and retention of nurses and doctors will still be required.[29]
- ▪
- Data accuracy: Hospitals might misreport data (for example, overstating vacancies or under-reporting full wards). To mitigate this, the system will log timestamped updates (an audit trail) and cross-check with billing and admission records. Random audits by independent teams (using spot checks or patient surveys) will verify portal data. Aligning incentives can also encourage truthful reporting (for example, including occupancy data in performance evaluations or funding decisions).[30]
- ▪
- Incentives and gaming: Some hospitals, especially private ones, might resist sharing data or attempt to game the system. Clear policies or legal mandates will be needed to require participation. Private providers can be enlisted through existing schemes, such as the Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission and the Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana insurance network, which already involve thousands of hospitals and collect some bed data. Incentives for participation might include integration with the eSanjeevani telemedicine platform and the Ayushman Bharat Health Account system, or higher reimbursements for demonstrating faster throughput. [26,31,32,33]
- ▪
- Private sector integration: Initially will be focused on public and large corporate hospitals. Over time, the system can include willing private chains. Eventually, policy can require anonymized bed reporting from all hospitals during emergencies.
- ▪
- Operations and maintenance: Sustaining the digital dashboard will require modest central funding from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare or National Health Mission grants.[34,35] Using existing government IT infrastructure minimizes costs. Hardware and software upgrades (for example, redundant servers) should be planned, and a helpdesk established (possibly by expanding the existing e-Hospital support model).[15]
- ▪
- Privacy and security: The portal will only share aggregate bed numbers and will not contain personal data. Patient identities will not appear in the system. Administrative access will require authentication. All data flows will comply with India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) 2023 and the National Digital Health Mission (NDHM), and a clear privacy policy will be published.[36,37] For ambulance integration, only anonymized patient case severity will be shared with emergency crews.
- ▪
- Change management: Clinicians may be wary of additional reporting burdens. The portal will reuse data from routine hospital workflows (for example, admission and discharge modules) to minimize extra entry. Training and communication will emphasize that the system benefits all providers by making it easier to arrange admissions when hospitals are busy.[38]
Cost And Return-On-Investment
Limitations of the Proposal:
- ▪
- Limited evidence and context-specific findings: The proposal draws on a small number of pilots and studies, which may not reflect the full range of India’s diverse health system.[21,22] Gains seen in a single tertiary centre or the COVID-19 dashboard in Delhi may not repeat in rural or under-resourced facilities.[42] Without broader trials across varied states and hospital types, the generalisability of these results is unclear. Over-generalising from limited evidence risks overlooking challenges unique to remote or resource-constrained settings.
- ▪
- Human resources as the real bottleneck: A digital portal cannot overcome fundamental staff shortages. Many public hospitals lack sufficient doctors, nurses and support staff, so empty beds often indicate too few caregivers rather than a lack of information. In such cases, improved visibility alone will not increase capacity. The proposal acknowledges the need for more health workers, but its premise assumes that coordination can substitute for recruitment. In practice, raising occupancy will require simultaneous investment in hiring, training and retention of clinical staff.[29]
- ▪
- Digital infrastructure and readiness gaps: The initiative assumes reliable IT systems and internet connectivity that do not exist everywhere. Many smaller or rural facilities still use paper records or fragmented software, and network outages are frequent. Even existing e-health platforms struggle with interoperability. Integrating disparate systems across states and hospitals is a formidable technical challenge. These infrastructure gaps could delay or complicate implementation, especially outside well-resourced centres.[43]
- ▪
- Behaviour changes and incentive issues: Simply making data available does not guarantee that administrators, clinicians or ambulance crews will change their practices. Existing routines, hierarchies and heavy workloads may resist new protocols. Healthcare staff might view the portal as an extra reporting burden unless it clearly aligns with their incentives and workflows.[38] Hospitals might also manipulate or overstate figures if oversight is weak. Ensuring that real-time information leads to action will require clear incentives, training and accountability mechanisms.
- ▪
- Private sector engagement and data integrity: Private hospitals provide 48.2% of India’s inpatient care and constitute 63% of the country’s approximately 70,000 hospitals.[44,45] Their inclusion is therefore essential for any credible national bed-tracking system, yet many private providers may resist sharing real-time data. Profit-driven providers might distrust centralised systems or see little benefit in participation. Even if included, the accuracy of privately reported data could vary. Without strong legal mandates and enforcement, some facilities might exaggerate availability or selectively report. Robust auditing and transparent governance will be needed to build trust and ensure the portal reflects reality.
- ▪
- Equity and access barriers: The assumption that a national dashboard will automatically improve equity is optimistic. Marginalised and rural patients may lack access to smartphones, internet or reliable transport to reach alternate facilities. Urban, tech-savvy populations could benefit first while poorer groups remain unaware.[46] Simply listing a bed as available does not overcome social and geographic hurdles. To truly advance equity, the system must be linked with outreach efforts (for example, via community health workers or toll-free helplines for rural areas) and integrated with patient transportation planning, which adds further complexity.
- ▪
- Governance and coordination challenges: Implementing a national system requires extensive coordination between central and state governments and buy-in from diverse stakeholders. Health policy is primarily a state matter, so states may have different priorities or capacities.[47] Questions remain about who will govern the platform, how data rights are managed, and how accountability is maintained across jurisdictions. Political changes or bureaucratic inertia could stall progress. Effective central–state coordination and clear accountability frameworks will be crucial, but they aren’t guaranteed.[48]
- ▪
- Scalability and sustainability issues: Pilots often succeed under controlled conditions with dedicated support, but scaling up to thousands of hospitals is far more complex.[49] Costs for deployment, training and maintenance could grow significantly at scale. It is unclear how technical support and help desk services would be sustained nationally. The initial cost-benefit analysis is illustrative, but real-world return on investment depends on adoption, data quality and staff compliance. If the system underperforms or loses credibility, stakeholder confidence could be eroded and long-term support lost.
- ▪
- Quality of care and system limitations: The portal focuses on bed availability, but it does not directly address the broader quality of care. A bed may be nominally free but lack equipment, medicines or adequate staff for safe treatment. There is also a risk that emphasising occupancy metrics could inadvertently prioritise speed over patient outcomes. The system does not measure whether redirected transfers improve recovery or survival. In short, better bed-tracking does not guarantee better treatment; parallel efforts are needed to ensure clinical quality and patient outcomes.[50]
Conclusion and Policy Recommendations
References
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Health expenditure of GDP [Internet]. New Delhi; 2025 Mar [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://sansad.in/getFile/annex/267/AU2054_gymp3e.pdf?source=pqars#:~:text=(a)%20whether%20it%20is%20a,(OOPE)%20is%2039.4%25.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Shortage of hospital beds [Internet]. New Delhi; 2022 Mar [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://sansad.in/getFile/loksabhaquestions/annex/178/AU3683.pdf?source=pqals#:~:text=,guided%20by%20the%20population%20norms.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. India’s Healthcare Infrastructure [Internet]. New Delhi; 2025 Jul [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://sansad.in/getFile/loksabhaquestions/annex/185/AU1000_LIR76k.pdf?source=pqals#:~:text=(d)%20the%20steps%20taken%20by,State%20schemes%20in%20this%20regard?&text=(a)%20to%20(c):,1%20bed%20per%201000%20population.
- Reuters. India’s big hospital chains think small to expand in booming market. 2023 Dec 21 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/indias-big-hospital-chains-think-small-expand-booming-market-2023-12-21/?utm_source=chatgpt.com.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Government has taken multiple steps to further increase availability of doctors in the country [Internet]. 2022 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetailm.aspx?PRID=1845081.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Measures to increase Nursing Manpower [Internet]. 2022 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1813656.
- Jeevitha, G. Health workforce status in India: A qualitative analysis of parliamentary questions documented in the last two decades. J Family Med Prim Care [Internet]. 2025 Jun 30 [cited 2025 Sep 18];14(6):2351–7. Available online: https://journals.lww.com/jfmpc/fulltext/2025/06000/health_workforce_status_in_india__a_qualitative.40.aspx.
- Aloh HE, Onwujekwe OE, Aloh OG, Nweke CJ. Is bed turnover rate a good metric for hospital scale efficiency? A measure of resource utilization rate for hospitals in Southeast Nigeria. Cost Eff Resour Alloc [Internet]. 2020 Dec 1 [cited 2025 Sep 19];18(1):21. Available online: https://resource-allocation.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12962-020-00216-w.
- E. Mhonbemo Patton. Evaluating Efficiency of the Hospitals [Internet]. Kohima; 2021 Jun [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://cag.gov.in/uploads/download_audit_report/2021/11-Chapter-7-061a245654ef135.85672446.pdf.
- ICRA Limited. FY2026 to be another robust year for the Indian hospital industry; sector outlook revised to Positive: ICRA [Internet]. New Delhi; 2025 Jul [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://www.icra.in/CommonService/OpenMediaS3?Key=4fce5207-55d9-4778-9a0d-ecea5f3cefb5.
- Chauhan AS, Guinness L, Bahuguna P, Singh MP, Aggarwal V, Rajsekhar K, et al. Cost of hospital services in India: a multi-site study to inform provider payment rates and Health Technology Assessment. BMC Health Serv Res [Internet]. 2022 Nov 14 [cited 2025 Sep 18];22(1):1343. Available online: https://bmchealthservres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12913-022-08707-7.
- Nguyen JM, Six P, Antonioli D, Glemain P, Potel G, Lombrail P, et al. A simple method to optimize hospital beds capacity. Int J Med Inform [Internet]. 2005 Jan 1 [cited 2025 Sep 18];74(1):39–49. Available online: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1386505604001856?via%3Dihub.
- O’Connor, P. Hospital Construction Costs: Analytical Note Item Type Report [Internet]. Dublin; 2025 Jan [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://www.lenus.ie/server/api/core/bitstreams/7f5cd8b7-017b-483a-8e52-1b53085c701b/content.
- BuiltX Sustainable Design and Construction. Hospital Construction Cost in India (2025) [Internet]. New Delhi; 2025 Jun [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://www.builtxsdc.com/blog/hospital-construction-cost-in-india-2025.
- Gupta H, Verma SK, Gautam M, Kumar S, Patwa AK, Nigam N. Analysis of Government Website for Web-Registration to Assess Pattern of the Covid Pandemic. J Family Med Prim Care [Internet]. 2022 Jun 30 [cited 2025 Sep 19];11(6):2890–5. Available online: https://journals.lww.com/jfmpc/fulltext/2022/06000/analysis_of_government_website_for.101.aspx.
- National Informatics Centre (NIC). eHospital Dashboard [Internet]. 2015 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://dashboard.ehospital.gov.in/ehospitaldashboard/.
- The Times of India. Delhi government now has an app to track available hospital beds, ventilators for Covid-19 patients. 2020 Jun 2 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/gadgets-news/delhi-govt-now-has-an-app-to-track-available-hospital-beds-ventilators-for-covid-19-patients/articleshow/76152324.cms.
- The Economic Times. Delhi Corona app launched, to give info about bed availability. 2020 Jun 2 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/delhi-corona-app-launched-to-give-info-about-bed-availability/articleshow/76152434.cms?from=mdr.
- ET HealthWorld. Delhi to roll out unified health information system, control room for real-time. 2025 May 2 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://health.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/policy/delhi-to-roll-out-unified-health-information-system-control-room-for-real-time-monitoring/120807411?utm_source=copy&utm_medium=pshare.
- Health and Family Welfare - Delhi Govt. Hospital ICU Beds Dashboard [Internet]. 2024 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://tejasvi.delhi.gov.in/ui/shared/DelhiGovernmentHospitalBedDashboardPublic.
- Wankar A, Chaitanya K, Uddin MA, Jalota C, Saxena K, Mojasia G, et al. From chaos to coordination: Leveraging technology for efficient bed management in a large and complex healthcare system. Int J Res Med Sci [Internet]. 2025 Jul 30 [cited 2025 Sep 18];13(8):3328–35. Available online: https://www.msjonline.org/index.php/ijrms/article/view/15378.
- Samson, O. Improving Hospital Efficiency: Real-Time Data Integration for Optimized Patient Flow and Resource Allocation [Internet]. ResearchGate. Ile-Ife; 2022 Apr [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/389135942_Improving_Hospital_Efficiency_Real-Time_Data_Integration_for_Optimized_Patient_Flow_and_Resource_Allocation.
- Yadav, M. State of Affairs of Healthcare Services in Capital of India Delhi High Court Prescription for Improving Quality of Healthcare Services in Delhi [Internet]. Banda: ResearchGate; 2024 Apr [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/379957451_State_of_Affairs_of_Healthcare_Services_in_Capital_of_India_Delhi_High_Court_Prescription_for_Improving_Quality_of_Healthcare_Services_in_Delhi.
- Grosman-Rimon L, Li DHY, Collins BE, Wegier P. Can we improve healthcare with centralized management systems, supported by information technology, predictive analytics, and real-time data?: A review. Medicine (Baltimore) [Internet]. 2023 Nov 10 [cited 2025 Sep 18];102(45): e35769. Available online: https://journals.lww.com/md-journal/fulltext/2023/11100/can_we_improve_healthcare_with_centralized.109.aspx.
- Shukla A, Solanki B, Panchal K, Usmani MA. Smart Ambulance Service System. OSR J Comput Eng [Internet]. 2020 Apr 10 [cited 2025 Sep 21];22(2):1–6. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/362709649_Smart_Ambulance_Service_System.
- Sharma RS, Rohatgi A, Jain S, Singh D. The Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM): Making of India’s Digital Health Story. CSI Trans ICT [Internet]. 2023 Mar 31 [cited 2025 Sep 19];11(1):3–9. Available online: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40012-023-00375-0#citeas.
- Srivastava, N. MeghRaj A Cloud Environment for e-governance in India. Int J Comput Sci Eng [Internet]. 2018 Nov 30 [cited 2025 Sep 19];6(11):759–63. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330138634_MeghRaj_A_Cloud_Environment_for_e-governance_in_India.
- Shahu S, Shinde V, Gudhe V. Analysis of the Bed-occupancy, Utilization and Turnover Rate of Acharya Vinoba Bhave Rural Hospital, India. J Pharm Res Int [Internet]. 2021 Dec 29 [cited 2025 Sep 21];33(63B):218–23. Available online: https://journaljpri.com/index.php/JPRI/article/view/5532?__cf_chl_tk=25fiNUiY7aQtBMcMKpnZhvva6TigE1NhLS_NweYs90w-1758456627-1.0.1.1-bVKkKS.3P4_0q4qy7EQe5tFeTIzOiwamw7lXEYsvNFo.
- Mehta V, Ajmera P, Kalra S, Miraj M, Gallani R, Shaik RA, et al. Human resource shortage in India’s health sector: a scoping review of the current landscape. BMC Public Health [Internet]. 2024 May 21 [cited 2025 Sep 18];24(1):1368. Available online: https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-024-18850-x#citeas.
- Chen H, Hailey D, Wang N, Yu P. A Review of Data Quality Assessment Methods for Public Health Information Systems. Int J Environ Res Public Health [Internet]. 2014 May 14 [cited 2025 Sep 18];11(5):5170–207. Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/5/5170.
- Dastidar BG, Suri S, Nagaraja VH, Jani A. A virtual bridge to Universal Healthcare in India. Commun Med [Internet]. 2022 Nov 16;2(1):145. [CrossRef]
- Ranjan A, Singh G, Singh H, Singh M. Digital Transformation of Healthcare Access: A Comparative Time Series Analysis of Online Versus Conventional OPD Registrations at a Tertiary Care Hospital. Cureus [Internet]. 2025 Apr 9;17(4): e81970. [CrossRef]
- National Health Authority. PMJAY-Hospital List [Internet]. New Delhi; 2018 Sep [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://nha.gov.in/img/resources/PMJAY-Hospital-List.pdf.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. From Data to Diagnosis- Transforming Healthcare through Digitalization [Internet]. 2025 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2094604.
- Kadarpeta RSR, Anand JS, Achungura G. Strengthening Public Financing of Primary Healthcare in India: A Perspective. Health Serv Insights [Internet]. 2024 May 10 [cited 2025 Sep 21];17. Available online: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/11786329241249289.
- Sood A, Mishra D, Surya V, Singh H, Sundaresan R, Pal D, et al. Challenges and recommendations for enhancing digital data protection in Indian Medical Research and Healthcare Sector. NPJ Digit Med [Internet]. 2025 Jan 22;8(1). [CrossRef]
- Raj GM, Dananjayan S, Agarwal N. Inception of the Indian Digital Health Mission: Connecting…the…Dots. Health Care Sci [Internet]. 2023 Oct 9 [cited 2025 Sep 21];2(5):345–51. Available online: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hcs2.67.
- Sloss EA, Abdul S, Aboagyewah MA, Beebe A, Kendle K, Marshall K, et al. Toward Alleviating Clinician Documentation Burden: A Scoping Review of Burden Reduction Efforts. Appl Clin Inform [Internet]. 2024 May 5 [cited 2025 Sep 18];15(03):446–55. Available online: https://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/s-0044-1787007.
- Delhi State Health Mission. Approval of Emergency COVID Response Plan [Internet]. New Delhi; 2020 May [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://dshm.delhi.gov.in/%28S%28juvtro2inma3ddd4wrcy0u4e%29%29/pdf/MOM/EmpoweredExecutive_Comm_19_05_20.pdf?
- Mark TL, Howard JN, Misra S, Fuller L. Bed Tracking Systems: Do They Help Address Challenges in Finding Available Inpatient Beds? Psychiatr Serv [Internet]. 2019 Oct 1 [cited 2025 Sep 18];70(10):921–6. Available online: https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.201900079?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%20%200pubmed.
- Coiera E, Chan A, Brooke-Cowden K, Rahimi-Ardabili H, Halim N, Tufanaru C. Clinical and economic impact of digital dashboards on hospital inpatient care: a systematic review. JAMIA Open [Internet]. 2025 Aug 1 [cited 2025 Sep 21];8(4). Available online: https://academic.oup.com/jamiaopen/article/8/4/ooaf078/8214040.
- Health and Family Welfare Department. Delhi State Health Data Management Portal [Internet]. https://coviddelhi.nic.in/CFWHome.aspx. 2024 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://cfwcst.delhi.gov.in/DHB/Login.aspx.
- Omweri, FS. A Systematic Literature Review of E-Government Implementation in Developing Countries: Examining Urban-Rural Disparities, Institutional Capacity, and Socio-Cultural Factors in the Context of Local Governance and Progress towards SDG 16.6. Int J Res Med Sci [Internet]. 2024 Aug 31 [cited 2025 Sep 18];8(08):1173–99. Available online: https://rsisinternational.org/journals/ijriss/articles/a-systematic-literature-review-of-e-government-implementation-in-developing-countries-examining-urban-rural-disparities-institutional-capacity-and-socio-cultural-factors-in-the-context-of-local-gov/.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Adequate Funds to Public Sector Health Services [Internet]. New Delhi; 2024 Jul [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://sansad.in/getFile/loksabhaquestions/annex/182/AU883_RSEYSi.pdf?source=pqals.
- Knight Frank. Global Healthcare Report - 2023 [Internet]. London; 2023 Nov [cited 2025 Sep 21]. Available online: https://content.knightfrank.com/research/2783/documents/en/global-healthcare-report-2023-10783.pdf.
- Digital Health News. From Disparity to Parity: The Role of Tech in Rural and Urban Healthcare. 2025 Mar 19 [cited 2025 Sep 19]. Available online: https://community.nasscom.in/communities/healthtech-and-life-sciences/disparity-parity-role-tech-rural-urban-healthcare.
- Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. Exorbitant Charges by Private Hospitals [Internet]. New Delhi; 2019 Jul [cited 2025 Sep 18]. Available online: https://sansad.in/getFile/loksabhaquestions/annex/171/AU4531.pdf?source=pqals.
- Gudi N, Lakiang T, Pattanshetty S, Sarbadhikari S, John O. Challenges and prospects in India’s digital health journey. Indian J Public Health [Internet]. 2021 Jun 14 [cited 2025 Sep 18];65(2):209. Available online: https://journals.lww.com/ijph/fulltext/2021/65020/challenges_and_prospects_in_india_s_digital_health.22.aspx.
- World Health Organization (WHO), Regional Office for Europe. Scaling up projects and initiatives for better health [Internet]. Copenhagen; 2016 Aug [cited 2025 Sep 21]. Available online: https://iris.who.int/bitstream/handle/10665/343809/9789289051552-eng.pdf.
- Rabiei R, Almasi S. Requirements and challenges of hospital dashboards: A systematic literature review. BMC Med Inform Decis Mak [Internet]. 2022 Nov 8 [cited 2025 Sep 21];22(1). Available online: https://bmcmedinformdecismak.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12911-022-02037-8#Sec14.
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
