Renaid Solutions designs and builds the digital foundations that allow health systems — at city, national, and regional scale — to function as one. Not another application. Infrastructure.
Countries around the world have world-class hospitals, brilliant doctors, and ambitious national health programmes. What most do not have is the connective tissue that binds them together — and the result is a system where decisions are made every day on incomplete, unreliable, or simply unavailable data.
When a patient arrives at a hospital, they carry their entire medical history in their head — or in a folder of paper. There is no shared record. Doctors make critical decisions with incomplete information every single day, in every country in the world.
Tracking a medicine from manufacturer to patient remains largely manual and opaque. Counterfeit and substandard medicines are not an edge case — they are a systemic failure with real consequences for real people.
Disease outbreaks are confirmed weeks after they begin — signals exist in isolated registers that never speak to each other. By the time authorities are alerted, containment has already become crisis management.
Hospitals, labs, pharmacies, and government programmes each run on platforms built in isolation. Getting them to share information requires years of negotiation and cost — and even when attempted, it rarely works.
The most important work in healthcare is
the work that happens between the systems —
not inside them.
We do not replace what health systems have already built. We design the pathways, build the bridges, and lay the foundation that makes what they have built finally work together.
Everything Renaid builds falls into one of four areas — each addressing a universal gap in how health systems operate today. Together, they form the backbone of a health system that can see itself clearly, respond quickly, and serve every citizen equitably.
A patient's health history exists only where they have been treated before. Move hospitals or cross a border — and you start from zero. Allergies go unrecorded. Drug interactions go undetected.
Systems that allow a patient's health record to follow them — securely, with their consent — wherever they seek care. Not owned by any single hospital. Governed by national standards. Accessible at the point of care.
A doctor seeing a patient for the first time knows their complete history. A government programme tracks outcomes across a population. A patient is never an unknown stranger to the health system again.
Tracking a medicine from production to patient remains extraordinarily difficult. Prescriptions are lost or forged. Regulatory agencies operate with incomplete information on products they are meant to oversee.
Infrastructure connecting drug manufacturers, regulators, prescribers, and pharmacies into a single traceable network. Every medicine has a verified identity. Every prescription has a verifiable trail.
Counterfeit medicines become easier to detect. Dangerous interactions are flagged before dispensing. Regulatory agencies move from reactive to proactive — acting on live data rather than delayed reports.
Hospitals, labs, insurance schemes, and health programmes were each built in isolation. Getting them to share information requires years of negotiation and significant cost with uncertain outcomes.
The integration layer that allows existing health systems to exchange information without rebuilding from scratch. A lab result flows to the referring doctor. An insurance claim is validated without a phone call.
Health systems stop working in silos. Administrative costs fall. Governments gain a real-time view of how the entire health system is functioning — not just the parts they directly control.
Outbreaks appear first as scattered signals across unconnected clinics and labs. Without infrastructure to connect those signals in real time, public health authorities always respond to yesterday's problem.
Surveillance systems that aggregate signals from hospitals, pharmacies, and labs continuously — surfacing meaningful patterns to public health authorities before they become crises.
Governments stop reacting to outbreaks and start anticipating them. Containment becomes possible at a speed previously unachievable. The human and financial cost of preventable emergencies falls dramatically.
We design systems that allow a patient's health record to follow them — securely, with their consent — wherever they seek care. A doctor seeing a patient for the first time knows their complete history. A patient is never an unknown stranger to the health system again.
Infrastructure connecting drug manufacturers, regulators, prescribers, and pharmacies into a single traceable network. Counterfeit medicines become easier to detect. Regulatory agencies move from reactive to proactive.
The integration layer that allows existing health systems to exchange information without rebuilding from scratch. Health systems stop working in silos. Governments gain a real-time view of the entire system.
Surveillance systems that aggregate signals from hospitals, pharmacies, and labs continuously — surfacing meaningful patterns before they become crises. Governments stop reacting and start anticipating.
Every government and health authority is under pressure to harness AI — to predict disease, personalise care, detect fraud, and optimise resources. The promise is real. But AI in healthcare is only as reliable as the data beneath it.
Fragmented records. Inconsistent formats. Systems that have never communicated. These are the reason most healthcare AI initiatives fail to move beyond a proof of concept. When the underlying data is broken, the intelligence built on top of it is unreliable. In healthcare, unreliable intelligence is not just wasteful — it is dangerous.
Before a health system can benefit from artificial intelligence, it needs its information in order. Connected, consistent, trustworthy, and complete. That is precisely the foundation Renaid builds.
"The most sophisticated algorithm in the world cannot compensate for data that was never collected, never connected, or never trusted."
Technology imposed on a health system does not last. It gets bypassed, abandoned, or replaced the moment priorities shift. Durable infrastructure is built with the people who will depend on it.
Every engagement begins with a structured assessment of the current state — what systems exist, what gaps are critical, and where the real leverage points are. We do not propose solutions before we understand the problem in its full complexity.
We design infrastructure that governments will own and operate independently — not systems that require an ongoing vendor relationship. Our goal is to make ourselves progressively less necessary, not more indispensable.
National health infrastructure cannot be rebuilt overnight. We work in defined phases — each delivering real, usable outcomes — so decision-makers see tangible value before committing to the next stage.
Every engagement includes a deliberate programme of capability transfer to government teams. The infrastructure we build should be fully understood, maintained, and evolved by the institutions it was built to serve.
Renaid Solutions was not founded by technologists who discovered healthcare. It was built by a team that has worked inside hospitals and health institutions, engaged with governments on health policy, navigated pharmaceutical and regulatory environments, and understood — firsthand — the real-world complexity of delivering public health at scale.
We are not here to sell a platform. We are here to build infrastructure — the kind that becomes part of how a health system works, as quietly and reliably as roads and electricity. Infrastructure that outlasts any government, any technology cycle, and any vendor relationship.
"We design and build digital infrastructure powering modern healthcare ecosystems — globally, durably, and in service of the people health systems are built to serve."
We work with health ministries, national and state governments, regulatory bodies, and international health organisations across the world. There is no pitch. No product demo. Just a conversation about what you are trying to build.