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Home » Patient private capital is needed to help Asia plug its healthcare gaps
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Patient private capital is needed to help Asia plug its healthcare gaps

Press RoomBy Press Room9 February 20264 Mins Read
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Patient private capital is needed to help Asia plug its healthcare gaps

Asia’s healthcare challenges include aging populations, rising disease, and strained infrastructure, but the crisis is better understood at the kitchen table, where families decide what conditions to treat, and what to ignore, according to their savings.

While the APAC region makes up 60% of the world’s population, the region accounts for a mere 22% of global healthcare spending. According to the World Health Organization, most developing Asian countries spend just 2–3% of GDP on health, and in many cases public funding amounts to less than $150 per person annually, compared with more than $4,000 per person under OECD norms. Government procurement bottlenecks add further friction, delaying nearly 40% of major health projects. This means that in practice, families often absorbed costs, doctors improvised, and communities carried the burden.

However, with populations aging faster than incomes are rising, that model is no longer viable. Rising rates of chronic illness demand lifelong care, rather than one-off interventions. At the same time, climate stress amplifies respiratory and waterborne diseases, while wealthier Asians are demanding higher-quality, more dignified healthcare.

Governments have reached the threshold of what public finance alone can deliver. Healthcare is competing with education, defense and infrastructure for scarce public capital. Even the most committed governments can’t expand capacity fast enough.

Private capital will be essential to expanding Asia’s healthcare systems—it can move quickly and deploy patient, flexible funding that enables greenfield projects and scalable platforms.

It brings together the three capabilities the region urgently needs: long-term investment matching the multi-year horizon of healthcare infrastructure, operating discipline that strengthens governance and clinical standards, and system-level scalability that fragmented markets alone cannot achieve.

The case for private capital

Across Asia, most new hospital beds are already financed privately. Dialysis networks, oncology platforms, diagnostic systems, and new pharmaceutical plants exist only because private capital moved faster than public systems.

Asia’s healthcare market is expected to grow to $5 trillion by 2030, driving 40% of the sector’s global growth. Private investors are tapping this opportunity because Asian healthcare is a volume business: profits come not by charging more to fewer people, but by treating more at lower cost. That’s why Asia’s most effective healthcare models are different from those in the West. In Singapore, day‑surgery centers let patients return home within hours, unlike the longer hospital stays common in Western systems. In India and China, digital platforms and national health records cut waiting times and errors, addressing interoperability gaps that still plague many developed systems.

This model requires patient capital: investors willing to reinvest, work alongside clinicians and regulators, and build capacity over time. Closing Asia’s healthcare gap would otherwise require millions of new beds and hundreds of thousands of clinicians, a process that would take decades. Technology and AI therefore become essential levers: boosting diagnostic capacity, reducing unnecessary visits, and extending care into rural and peri-urban areas. Rather than relying solely on scarce human resources, technology brings care closer to the patient.

Healthcare investors should not have to choose between profit and purpose. The more efficiently care is delivered, the more affordable it becomes, the more lives it can positively impact, all while returning profits to investors. Since Quadria’s investment in NephroPlus in May 2024, the dialysis network has added more than 110 centres, improved patient outcomes, strengthened governance and partnerships, and expanded internationally, including receiving approval to open its first centre in Saudi Arabia later this year. Its recent IPO demonstrates that scaling essential healthcare can deliver both measurable health impact and strong investor returns.

Building outcome-focused systems

The question Asia faces is no longer whether private capital should be involved in healthcare. It already is. The real question is whether it will be patient, disciplined and principled enough, and socially aligned enough, to meet the moment.

The risk today is not excessive private capital, but misaligned capital. Too often, long-term healthcare investment is sidelined not because the need is unclear, but because prevailing investment frameworks are poorly suited to healthcare’s realities—long build times, regulatory complexity and returns that compound through outcomes rather than speed.

Governments therefore have a decisive role to play. By de-risking essential healthcare investments, setting clearer market rules and strengthening stewardship, policymakers can crowd in patient private capital and ensure that impact and returns reinforce rather than undermine each other.

In the end, healthcare systems are judged not by ideology, but by outcomes: What they cost people not only in money, but in dignity, time and peace of mind. And by whether, when the bill arrives, it ends a life—or allows one to continue.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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