calender_icon.png 10 May, 2026 | 9:47 PM

Hyderabad to host 'Recovery One' Conference 2026

10-05-2026 09:13:15 PM

Hyderabad, May 9: India Is Saving More Lives Than Ever Before Recovery One 2026 to bring together leading doctors, rehabilitation experts, hospital leaders, policymakers, and academicians from across India in Hyderabad on May 10,2026 to discuss the future of recovery-led healthcare. India’s healthcare system has made extraordinary progress over the last decade in emergency medicine, critical care, trauma response, stroke management, organ support systems, and complex surgeries.

Conditions that were once considered fatal are now increasingly survivable due to advances in medical science, improved hospital infrastructure, and faster acute interventions. For lakhs of patients recovering from stroke, spinal injuries, traumatic brain injuries, prolonged ICU stays, neurological disorders, major surgeries, and age-related illnesses, survival is often only the first step of a much longer and more difficult journey.

Many patients continue to struggle with mobility loss, speech impairment, cognitive decline, muscle weakness, emotional trauma, dependency, and the inability to return to normal life even after receiving successful medical treatment.The conference will bring together leading doctors, rehabilitation specialists, hospital CEOs, policymakers, insurers, healthcare entrepreneurs, researchers, academicians, and technology innovators from across India to discuss why recovery can no longer remain a secondary healthcare conversation.

The conference comes at a time when India is witnessing a sharp rise in stroke incidence, neurological disorders, trauma cases, elderly care requirements, chronic diseases, and post-critical illness complications. Healthcare experts believe the country is entering an era where patient outcomes can no longer be measured only through survival rates or successful surgeries, but through how effectively patients regain independence, function, and quality of life after treatment.

“India has built strong capabilities in acute and emergency care over the years. We are saving more lives than ever before. But healthcare cannot end at survival. The real success of medicine lies in whether a patient is able to walk again, speak again, regain independence, return to work, and reclaim dignity after illness or injury. Recovery needs to become a mainstream healthcare priority and not an afterthought,” said Dr. Gaurav Thukral, Co-Founder and President, HCAH.