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Abstract: Healthcare facilities also consume enormous amounts of energy, generate massive quantities of waste, which contribute to the carbon footprint. The new energy-efficient technologies can enable sustainable facilities, which can reduce bio-medical waste, conserve water and energy, and thus facilitate to creation of a safe environment for patients, hospital staff, and visitors. To explore and understand the challenges of sustainable and agile practices in healthcare operations and their impact on the three pillars of sustainability. To examine the measures of sustainable healthcare and their impact on quality patient care and patient safety. This study employs a case study approach and qualitative research, systematically collecting and analysing thematic primary information from open-ended and semi-structured discussions with 50 healthcare stakeholders, based on research questions related to sustainability dimensions, processes, and practices. Emerging technologies like robotic surgery are enhancing patient safety, surgical precision, and clinical outcomes in leading Indian hospitals. As healthcare shifts towards value-based models, these innovations improve care quality, operational efficiency and economic sustainability, addressing rising chronic disease burdens and transforming traditional service delivery in Indian healthcare organizations. All these efforts can lead to an agile approach in hospitals that can effectively adapt technologies and innovation in clinical protocol, workflows, patient experience, and digital health technology with the objective of improving care. These can lead to an operation that is profitable and viable for the organization, and also affordable to patients and the social community at large. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.51505/ijmshr.2025.9307 |
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