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Foundation
stone for the Tata Medical Centre unveiled at Kolkata
February 21, 2006
- West Bengal Chief Minister
Budhadev Bhattacharjee and Tata Group Chairman Ratan
Tata unveiled the foundation stone for the Tata Medical
Centre, a cancer hospital
- An advanced cancer treatment
facility located on a 10-acre plot to be commissioned
by December 2007
- Total investment of Rs 120
crore entirely funded by Tata Trusts and Tata Group
companies.
West
Bengal Chief Minister Budhadev Bhattacharjee and Tata
Group Chairman Ratan Tata today unveiled the foundation
stone of the Rs 120 crore Tata Medical Centre on a
10-acre plot at Rajarhat in Kolkata.
The Tata Medical Centre ( TMC) to be commissioned in
December 2007 will have 150 beds as well as an outpatient
and ambulatory care facility for patients suffering
from cancer. The outpatient block to be completed in
two phases will cover a total area of 42,872 sq ft. The
TMC will be set up along the lines of the 65-year old
Tata Memorial Centre in Mumbai and will be supported
by the Tata Medial Centre Trust - a newly created Trust
through funding from three Tata Trusts — Sir Dorab Tata
Trust, Sir Ratan Tata Trust and Jamsetji Tata Trust
and Tata Group companies. The Centre will be a tertiary
care center for cancer and will promote prevention,
cure, rehabilitation and palliative care. It will also
offer diagnostic and therapeutic services, provide education
and conduct basic and clinical research. The infrastructure
for the outpatient services will be conducive for maximizing
Ambulatory care and minimize the need for hospitalization.
The provision of Ambulatory services as an outpatient
facility would also minimize the morbidity and costs
associated with hospitalization and maximize the provision
of services with revenue optimization.
Says Mr. Ratan Tata, Chairman, Tata Group and Chairman
of Tata Medical Centre Trust, "All of us in the
Tata Group are the inheritors of a legacy of creating
institutions that make a difference to the world we
live in. The doctrine of social responsibility as professed
by our Founder was, and will continue to be the central
theme of the Tata way of business.
The Tata Medical
Centre has been conceptualized and planned as the creation
of a world-class institution. It is estimated that over
53 per cent of the world's cancer cases are from the developing
world. The WHO estimates that by 2020 the global incidence
of cancer would have doubled to 20 million from the
present 10 million. Over 70 per cent of this 20 million
is expected to be from the developing world. In India
it is estimated that there are about 3 million cases
of cancer at any time. In 2004 nearly 1 million new
cases were diagnosed and there were 650,000 deaths from
cancer alone. The key to successful cancer control is
prevention and early detection of the disease. Accordingly,
the Tata Medical Centre will be mandated to provide
service, education and research facilities for the North
East and North Eastern regions of the country as well
as neighboring countries.
The Tata Medical
Centre will have a strategic alliance with the Tata
Memorial Centre, Mumbai - to plan, commission and assist
the operations of the new hospital, and ensure excellence
and sustained progress of the Institution. According
to statistics from the Tata Memorial Centre, Mumbai
over 24 percent of the 230,000 patients, attended to
by the hospital annually come from India's North East
and Eastern regions.
The Architecture
and Design of Tata Medical Centre has been undertaken
by world-renowned architects Cannon Design which provide
architectural and engineering services for 21st century
buildings. Design for healthcare has been a cornerstone
for Cannon Design since the company's inception. The
company has also been ranked amongst the top ten design
firms in the area of healthcare for over a decade. Cannon
Design's practice encompasses a wide range of interrelated
services including planning, architecture, engineering,
interior design and project delivery. The company has
to its credit the development of new specialty institutions
and clinics around the world.
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