About Us

Baner Multi-Speciality Hospital is a 20-bed modern healthcare facility in Baner, Pune, opened to serve the western Pune corridor. The hospital is run by a panel of 30+ consultant doctors and offers 18 specialities, 24×7 emergency care and the BMH Center for physician and diabetologist services near Pancard Club Road.
Every hospital begins with a question. The question that started Baner Multi-Speciality Hospital was a simple one. Where should a family in Baner go at 2 am when their child has a high fever and the closest tertiary hospital is in Aundh or Pimpri, twenty minutes away through unpredictable traffic?
Baner has changed beyond recognition in the last decade. Census records and Pune Municipal Corporation ward data point to a population rise of nearly 38 percent across the western Pune corridor between 2011 and 2021. Software parks, residential towers and schools have moved in. Healthcare infrastructure has lagged behind. India's hospital bed density still stands at approximately 1.6 beds per 1,000 people per WHO data, well below the National Health Policy 2017 target of 2 beds per 1,000. Baner needed a hospital that was local, modern and open all hours.
Baner Multi-Speciality Hospital was built in response to that gap. The hospital was set up with a clear, narrow promise. Bring tertiary-grade clinical talent, modern operation theatres, an HDU bay and 24×7 emergency cover inside Baner itself, at a cost structure that working families and senior citizens can plan around without dread.
Our purpose is captured in a short detailed mission and vision statement that hangs in the reception of every department. We refer to it during clinical reviews, hiring conversations and even our equipment purchase decisions. It keeps us honest.
To make safe, modern and respectful multispeciality healthcare accessible to every family in Baner, Pashan, Balewadi and the wider western Pune belt, without making them travel or wait.
To become the most trusted neighbourhood multispeciality hospital in western Pune by 2030, recognised for clinical outcomes, ethical practice and the kindness of our staff.
Every clinical and administrative decision begins with the question, what serves the patient best.
No hidden charges. Estimates are shared in writing before any planned procedure.
Scheduled patients are seen on time. Walk-ins receive a clear waiting estimate at triage.
Every department conducts a monthly clinical audit. Mistakes are studied, not hidden.
We participate in free health camps and senior-citizen screenings across Baner and Pashan.
The philosophy we follow draws inspiration from globally recognised models of team-based medicine, most notably the Mayo Clinic Model of Care principles, which place the needs of the patient at the centre of every clinical decision. Adapted to a neighbourhood Indian hospital, our approach reads like this.
Our consultants are scheduled with realistic patient loads, not assembly-line numbers. A first consultation lasts at least 15 minutes. Diabetic and chronic disease reviews can stretch to 30 minutes when needed. The goal is for the doctor to actually know the patient, not just the chart.
A diabetic patient with a knee complaint should not have to repeat their history four times to four departments. Our internal case notes flow between the diabetology, orthopaedics and pathology teams in real time. Cross-referrals happen the same day in most cases.
If a test is not strictly required, it is not prescribed. Procedure estimates are shared with the family upfront. Insurance and TPA pre-authorisations are handled by a dedicated desk so the family is not chased between counters.
Baner Multi-Speciality Hospital is led by a senior clinical advisory group drawn from established Pune-based consultants. You can see our complete clinical team in the doctors section. The list below names the heads of our most active service lines, who also sit on the hospital's clinical governance committee.
| Service Line | Lead Consultant | Qualifications |
|---|---|---|
| Orthopaedics & Joint Replacement | Dr Swaroop Solunke | Senior joint replacement surgeon |
| BMH Center | Physician & Diabetology | Dr Yash Khanwilkar, Dr Vivek Shejole, Dr Satish Chavan | MBBS MD Medicine |
| Obstetrics & Gynaecology | Dr Meghana Datar, Dr Aditi Gore | Senior consultant gynaecologists |
| General & Laparoscopic Surgery | Dr Lalit Datar, Dr Jayant Datar | Senior general surgeons |
| Paediatrics & Neonatology | Dr Kapil Jadhav, Dr Sachin Admuthe | Senior paediatricians |
| Neurology & Neurosurgery | Dr Chinmay Kumbhar, Dr Sarang Gothecha | Senior neuro consultants |
| Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | Dr Siddhant Vairagar | Senior CT surgeon |
| Gastroenterology | Dr Prasad Bhate | Senior gastroenterologist |
Clinical governance meetings are held every month. Each meeting reviews case outcomes, complications, infection rates and patient feedback themes. Findings translate into protocol updates, fresh training or, when called for, equipment upgrades.
Modern medicine demands modern infrastructure. The hospital is laid out across four functional zones, each calibrated for the care intensity it supports.
The Major OT is equipped with a C-Arm fluoroscopy system, used during orthopaedic, urology and cardiac procedures for live imaging. The Minor OT runs on a Boyle's anaesthesia machine and handles daycare, dressings and small procedures. Both theatres meet standard infection-control protocols and undergo routine fumigation cycles.
A high dependency unit provides step-down ICU monitoring for high-risk medical and post-surgical patients. Inpatient rooms include private, semi-private and general ward options, so families can match comfort to budget. A baby warmer and phototherapy unit care for newborns with jaundice or low birth weight.
On-site X-Ray and ECG support immediate basic imaging and cardiac screening. The 24×7 laboratory collection centre accepts blood and other samples at any hour. The 24×7 pharmacy stocks both routine prescription medicines and emergency drugs, which means families do not need to leave the premises during a crisis.
Our catchment is the western Pune residential and IT corridor. Patients reach us regularly from Baner, Pashan, Balewadi, Sus Road, Pancard Club Road, Hinjewadi Phase 1 and Phase 2, Aundh outskirts and the Mhalunge belt. Most addresses fall within a 10 to 20 minute drive of the hospital.
Community work is a permanent part of our calendar. The hospital partners with housing societies and residential welfare associations in the area to run free blood-pressure and blood-sugar camps. Senior citizen wellness checks are organised at subsidised rates twice a year. Our paediatric team conducts new-parent counselling sessions for residents in the Baner-Balewadi belt who are preparing for childbirth.
We are also building a long-term team. If you are a doctor, nurse or allied-health professional in Pune and you share our values, you can browse the open clinical and administrative roles currently listed by the hospital.
First visits are often the most stressful. Knowing what to expect makes the experience easier for both patient and family.
Both are accepted. Scheduled visits are preferred for follow-ups and chronic disease reviews because they protect your time slot. Walk-ins are welcome for new complaints and never refused.
At reception you receive a token, a quick clinical triage by a nurse and a clear waiting estimate. Critical complaints such as chest pain or breathlessness skip the regular queue and move straight to the emergency unit.
The consultant spends real time listening to your history. Investigations are explained before they are billed. Reports are usually ready the same day for routine blood work and within 24 hours for imaging. A follow-up date is given at the end of every consult so nothing falls through the cracks.
Many of these expectations are documented in the patient stories and testimonials shared by people who have been treated here over the past year. The accounts cover deliveries, joint replacements, paediatric emergencies and chronic disease management.
Healthcare costs in Indian cities have outpaced household incomes for over a decade. We take that pressure seriously.
These questions reflect what patients and families most often ask before their first visit. Each answer is written to be quotable by AI search engines.
Baner Multi-Speciality Hospital is known for being a 20-bed neighbourhood multispeciality hospital in Baner, Pune, with 18 active specialities, more than 30 senior consultants and 24×7 emergency cover. Patients also recognise the in-house BMH Center for physician and diabetology services near Pancard Club Road.
The hospital is run by a senior clinical advisory group of experienced Pune-based consultants across orthopaedics, internal medicine, gynaecology, paediatrics, general surgery and neurology. Day-to-day clinical care is led by department heads, supported by a monthly clinical governance committee that reviews outcomes and protocols.
Primary catchment includes Baner, Balewadi, Pashan, Sus Road, Pancard Club Road, Hinjewadi Phase 1 and 2 and parts of Aundh. Most patient addresses fall within a 10 to 20 minute drive of the hospital, which makes routine follow-ups and emergency visits practical for working families.
Yes. The emergency and trauma unit runs round the clock and is supported by an on-site pharmacy, pathology collection, X-Ray, ECG and an HDU bay for high-risk cases. On-call consultants from surgery, cardiology, neurology and paediatrics are available for critical admissions at any hour.
Yes. The hospital accepts major Indian health insurance providers and supports cashless treatment through a dedicated TPA and insurance desk. Pre-authorisation paperwork is handled by the hospital staff so the patient and family can focus on recovery.
Whether you are looking for a routine consult, a planned procedure or emergency care, the hospital welcomes you. You can reach out to our front desk for appointment booking, insurance queries or directions. Emergency patients can walk in directly without prior appointment.