Medix India

Medix India Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Medix India, Medical and health, 304, Naman Centre, G Block, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai.

Medix is a groundbreaking global health management company engineered to direct the full potential of health and medical expertise, treatment, and technology to people's most critical needs.

12/03/2026

A diagnosis is only the beginning — what truly matters is confidence that you’re on the right treatment path.

Mr Haresh Patni’s journey began with what he thought was a simple backache and led to a diagnosis of blood cancer, where accuracy is critical amidst over 60 different subtypes. In the shock of those first days, Medix provided what he needed most: clarity and access to the best possible treatment and ongoing support.

Certainty and peace of mind is paramount and part of your fight for healing when you have Cancer. In collaboration with the world's leading specialists and the most advanced technologies, we at Medix turn every stone to ensure our customers have that.

Watch his powerful story of trust, expertise, and recovery. 👇

Waking up at 3–4am every night is not always stress.Sometimes it’s one of the earliest biological warning signals your b...
11/03/2026

Waking up at 3–4am every night is not always stress.
Sometimes it’s one of the earliest biological warning signals your body gives you.

I learned that the hard way.

I used to think bad sleep meant stress.

Busy mind.
Too much work.
Too much responsibility.

That explanation felt neat.
Comforting.
Almost flattering.

Until my sleep didn’t just shorten.

It fractured.

I would fall asleep…
and wake up at 4:07am.
Wide awake.

No racing thoughts.
No anxiety.
Heart calm.
Mind quiet.

Just… awake.

That’s when I learned something many people still don’t realise:

Poor sleep is not always a stress problem.

When sleep breaks down without mental tension, it often points to something deeper:

– metabolic imbalance
– blood sugar instability
– inflammation
– hormonal disruption (cortisol, thyroid, peri/menopause)
– sleep apnea hiding in plain sight
– circadian rhythm misalignment

Sleep isn’t just recovery.
Sleep is biological data.

In longevity medicine, sleep disruption is increasingly treated not as a symptom to suppress — but as an early signal to investigate.

Research shows:

• Sleeping less than 6 hours per night increases cardiovascular risk by ~48%
• Chronic poor sleep increases Type 2 diabetes risk by up to 30–40%
• Poor sleep quality is linked to higher risk of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s
• Nearly 1 billion people globally are estimated to have sleep apnea — most undiagnosed

Yet we still tell high performers to “manage stress better.”

When their body may actually be asking a different question:

What’s out of balance?

My sleep didn’t improve when life slowed down.

It improved when I started listening differently.

Longevity doesn’t start with supplements or biohacks.

It starts with paying attention to the signals your body sends, especially at night.

If your body is waking you up,
it may not be stressed.
It may be trying to tell you something.

Sleep may be the most underrated diagnostic signal in modern medicine.

Peter Attia, MD Walker Huberman

Hormonal health is not a “niche” women’s issue - it shapes fertility, productivity, mental health, and the future workfo...
09/03/2026

Hormonal health is not a “niche” women’s issue - it shapes fertility, productivity, mental health, and the future workforce.

This Women’s Day week, we’re spotlighting how biology and workplace design collide, and why real equity means supporting women through PCOS, endometriosis, fertility journeys, pregnancy, and postpartum with structures that match reality, not outdated norms.
A fair economy should never ask women to choose between health, family, and career.

hashtag hashtag hashtag hashtag hashtag hashtag hashtag hashtag

09/03/2026

Leadership is not always loud.
Very often, it shows up in clarity of thought, steadiness under pressure, and a deep sense of responsibility for the people and systems around us.
Over the years, working across healthcare systems and countries, I have observed something striking: when complexity rises, and decisions matter most, many of the people bringing coordination, calm and clear judgment are women.
At Medix Global, I see this every day.
The faces in this short video represent some of the women across our multicultural organisation, physicians, nurses, medical case managers, operational leaders, customer service coordinators, research analysts and executives, app and software developers, finance and marketing leaders, who contribute to the way we think, lead and care for patients navigating some their health, and some of the most critical moments of their lives.
Their leadership is not always the most visible.
But it is defined by something powerful: clarity, resilience and durability.
On International Women’s Day, I am keen to recognise again the remarkable women across Medix who bring those qualities into our work every day.
I am proud to work alongside them.
Atzmon
Chief Executive Officer

04/03/2026

Happy Holi! May the colours of the festival bring positive energy and inspiration to your work.

02/03/2026

PCOS is not just about ovaries, periods, or fertility.

It is a metabolic and inflammatory condition — deeply influenced by insulin resistance, stress, visceral fat, and hormonal signaling.

For too long, women were told to lose weight or go on the pill.
The science now tells a different story: treat insulin sensitivity, address chronic stress, reduce inflammation, and personalise care.

PCOS is not a failure of willpower.
It’s a system‑level condition that deserves system‑level medicine.

Rare diseases may be individually uncommon, but together they affect 3–6% of the global population, representing million...
24/02/2026

Rare diseases may be individually uncommon, but together they affect 3–6% of the global population, representing millions of lives worldwide.

Behind every prolonged diagnosis is more than medical complexity. It’s fragmented systems, limited access to specialists, and symptoms that don’t fit neatly into textbook definitions.

At Medix Global, we focus on shortening that journey, through AI-powered phenotyping, multidisciplinary expert review, coordinated rapid diagnostics, and access to a global network of specialists.

Because earlier clarity changes outcomes.

We’d value your perspective on what needs to change to reduce the diagnostic odyssey.

Penyakit langka memang disebut “langka”, namun bila digabungkan, dampaknya dirasakan oleh 3–6% populasi global, jutaan individu dan keluarga di seluruh dunia.

Di balik setiap diagnosis yang tertunda, ada lebih dari sekadar tantangan medis. Ada kebingungan, rasa tidak pasti, sistem yang terfragmentasi, akses terbatas ke spesialis, serta gejala yang sering kali tidak pas dengan definisi di buku teks. Bagi pasien dan keluarga, ini bukan sekadar proses klinis, melainkan perjalanan panjang yang melelahkan.

Di Medix Global, kami membantu mengurangi beban ini.
Melalui fenotiping berbasis AI, tinjauan pakar multidisiplin, koordinasi diagnostik yang cepat, serta akses ke jaringan spesialis global, kami membantu menghadirkan kejelasan lebih awal, agar keputusan medis dapat diambil dengan lebih percaya diri.

Karena ketika kejelasan datang lebih cepat, peluang untuk hasil yang lebih baik pun ikut berubah.

Kami sangat menghargai pandangan Anda: menurut Anda, apa yang perlu berubah untuk benar benar mengurangi diagnostic odyssey bagi pasien penyakit langka?

23/02/2026

Rare diseases are called “rare”, but the difficulty around them is anything but.

Many start with symptoms that look like everyday health issues. They show up in different body systems, at different times, and only form a recognisable pattern as the months or years go by. This makes early recognition challenging, even in strong healthcare systems, and delays are often less about something being “missed” and more about how slowly and subtly rare diseases reveal themselves.
Raising awareness helps patients, caregivers, and healthcare professionals notice persistent patterns sooner, ask better questions, and push for the right investigations earlier in the journey.

💬 Did this help you see why rare diseases are so hard to identify early?
💾 Save this if you believe context matters in healthcare.






Epilepsy care is entering a new era — from advanced medications like VIMPAT, to FDA‐cleared wearables, AI‐driven seizure...
09/02/2026

Epilepsy care is entering a new era — from advanced medications like VIMPAT, to FDA‐cleared wearables, AI‐driven seizure forecasting, precision imaging, neurostimulation, and minimally invasive surgery. Up to 70% of people with epilepsy could become seizure‐free with the right treatment — yet access and personalization still matter. On World Epilepsy Day, let’s turn awareness into better outcomes.

One of the most common myths about cancer is that it always starts with pain. In reality, many early signs are subtle — ...
05/02/2026

One of the most common myths about cancer is that it always starts with pain. In reality, many early signs are subtle — and easy to ignore. A little more tired than usual. A change that doesn’t go away. Something that feels “off,” but not serious enough to act on. Because there’s no pain, people often wait. But early evaluation isn’t about assuming the worst. It’s about gaining clarity — early enough to act calmly and effectively. This World Cancer Day, the reminder is simple:
listening to your body early can make a real difference later.
💬 Comment “Aware” if this changed how you think about early signs.
🔁 Share this post — it could help someone take action in time.
💾 Save this as a reminder to not ignore persistent changes.

04/02/2026

Mark Fenlon never imagined his life would be defined by a diagnosis.
But when an MRI revealed three new tumours, everything changed — and the reality that his condition was incurable became impossible to ignore.

Beyond the shock of major surgery, Mark faced something even harder: uncertainty. He needed answers he could trust, the right specialist by his side, and reassurance that every decision about his care was truly the best possible one.

That’s when Mark reached out to Medix.

With expert medical guidance, personalised specialist recommendations, and continuous support, Mark no longer had to face cancer alone. Just 14 weeks after major surgery, he was able to return to normal life - turning fear into strength and uncertainty into hope.

On World Cancer Day, Fenlon’s story reminds us that cancer care is about more than treatment.
It’s about being seen, supported, and guided - every step of the way.

Watch his inspiring journey and discover how Medix’s dedicated medical team helped Mark move forward with confidence.

🔗 Learn more about Medix’ Cancer Care Program: https://medix-global.com/cancer-care-3/

Address

304, Naman Centre, G Block, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East
Mumbai
400051

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Medix India posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Medix India:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram