India is witnessing a growing healthcare challenge as an increasing number of people are living with multiple chronic illnesses simultaneously. Doctors across major cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru report that patients are no longer seeking treatment for a single health condition. Instead, many are managing five or six interconnected diseases at the same time, creating a new category of patients often referred to as “complex patients.”
Medical experts say the trend reflects a significant shift in the country’s disease burden. Conditions such as Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, chronic kidney disease, obesity, depression, sleep disorders, heart disease, and chronic pain are increasingly appearing together in the same individual. While each condition may be manageable on its own, treating several diseases simultaneously presents a far greater challenge for both patients and healthcare providers.
One of the most concerning aspects of this trend is the age at which these health problems are appearing. Traditionally, multiple chronic diseases were associated with older adults. However, doctors now report seeing patients in their 30s and 40s with health profiles that were once common among people in their 60s or 70s. Experts attribute this shift to rising obesity rates, sedentary lifestyles, poor dietary habits, chronic stress, inadequate sleep, and reduced physical activity.
Research supports these observations. A 2024 systematic review on multimorbidity in India found that roughly one in five Indians is living with two or more chronic conditions. Public health experts warn that the burden is likely to grow as the population ages and lifestyle-related diseases continue to increase.
The rise of complex patients is also exposing weaknesses in the healthcare system. Most treatment guidelines are designed to address individual diseases rather than multiple conditions occurring together. As a result, medications prescribed for one illness may worsen another, and specialists often focus only on their area of expertise. This can lead to fragmented care, where patients visit multiple doctors but lack a coordinated treatment plan that considers their overall health.
Doctors note that primary care physicians are increasingly acting as coordinators, helping patients navigate between cardiologists, endocrinologists, nephrologists, psychiatrists, and other specialists. However, the growing complexity of patient needs is placing additional pressure on healthcare providers and already stretched medical infrastructure.
For patients, the experience can be overwhelming. Managing multiple prescriptions, medical appointments, diagnostic tests, and lifestyle recommendations often creates confusion and treatment fatigue. Experts warn that when several specialists are involved, important interactions between diseases may sometimes go unnoticed.
Health professionals believe the solution lies not only in better treatment but also in stronger prevention strategies. They emphasize the importance of regular health screenings, healthier diets, physical activity, stress management, and coordinated care models that focus on the patient as a whole rather than on individual diseases. As non-communicable diseases continue to rise across India, doctors warn that healthcare systems must adapt quickly to meet the needs of an increasingly complex patient population.


































