Watching SuperOS go from whiteboard ideas to autonomously running a real hospital has been unreal. No more assistants or overlays—this is the infrastructure layer we always needed!
Grateful to the entire team for pulling this off in a record time @superhealth_ind
For years we’ve been told:
“India can’t build deep tech.”
“We do services. Not systems.”
“Real AI is built in Silicon Valley.”
Today, that narrative dies.
We just launched SuperOS — the world’s first AI Operating System that is already running the hospital.
Not assist.
Not generate notes.
Not make PowerPoints.
Run. The. Hospital.
Thread. 🧵
Assume the best.
Assume people will fulfill their promises.
That they will hold up their side of the bargain.
That they will also want a win/win outcome.
Don’t hedge your bets. Don’t cover your ass. Don’t use a lawyer. Leave yourself open to being taken advantage of.
99% of the time you will be amazed at what trust and vulnerability unlocks.
1% of the time you’ll be taken advantage of.
So worth it.
A hospital where an 89 year old can come alone without him or his family feeling scared. That is Superhealth.
Our benchmark of success isn’t the revenue or the valuations or even the footfall. It’s whether if my mom or dad went to the hospital without me I’d feel safe and would know they’d be cared for and they’d be ok.
Today had an 89 year old gentleman come in, all by himself from 20kms away. His son had printed out our entire website. He even brought laminated VIP pass cards with him 😭😭
This is the bar. An 89 year old can walk in and get care without his family being anxious.
I don’t care what other metric we meet or miss.
This is what Superhealth is about.
Honest healthcare. It’s for everyone.
Had my appointment with @superhealth_ind recently.
Was a very unique experience, me having visiting a quiet a few hospitals recently.
The concierge team worked hard to ensure I am in and out as quickly as possible while ensuring I get the best care.
Hospitals can be intimidating especially when you are unsure of your health, but the folks here took care and made me forget that I was a patient.
Thanks @varundubey
A few weeks ago, my wife had an eye injury - went to Apollo and Fortis Emergency, no Ophthalmologist available at both since it was a Sunday.
We were told St Johns will have one on duty.
Reached at ~8pm
Registration
Advance Deposit
Triage and Waiting - 45 mins
Consultation time - 10 mins
Discharge Summary - 30 mins
Discharged at ~10:30pm
The wait wasn’t because they had a long queue, it was only counter hopping and waiting for directions from nurses and resident doctors.
(The doctor was really nice to us, though)
—
She had an ear piercing infection today, visited Apollo Clinic at 5pm, paid 900 to meet a GP who said - meet an ENT Specialist (next available at 7:30pm).
Remembered @arnav_kumar’s tweet about @superhealth_ind and gave it a try.
VIP Plan @ 999 (introductory offer mostly)
Appointment booked in seconds.
Car parked by valet.
Met Doctor in less than a minute.
Apple Store like interiors.
Consultation was transcribed by AI.
Prescription instantly delivered on WhatsApp.
Doc’s Assistant explains prescription and gets medicines packed.
We left the hospital in less than 15 minutes.
I love how they’re solving the UX of Hospital visits.
SuperHealth is the Apple/Uber/UPI equivalent of how traditional experiences can be upgraded into an irreversible behaviour change.
I hope and pray I don’t have to visit hospitals but if I do, @superhealth_ind is going to by my default first choice.
Thank you @varundubey
The Bangalore twitter ecosystem is magical..
True story..
1. I ranted on Twitter about the wait times and horrible experience at hospitals in Bangalore.
2. Someone on this app told me about Superhealth, founded by Varun
3. I DMed Varun. He responded kindly without knowing the agenda
4. Met Varun. We spoke for 90 mins. He explained the concept, gave me a tour. Spoke about his plan, his ambition and why this is a personal mission for him. His passion shines through. Everything is crafted with love and detail.
Got goosebumps
5. I booked an appointment for 10 am today. The attendant parked my car. The concierge helped me find the doctor. I met the doctor at 10 am sharp 🤯
6. Doc prescribed an ultrasound.
I got the preciption on WhatsApp..
At 10:10 the doctor's attendant booked the ultrasound for me and explained the next steps. 🤯🤯
No running across departments.
The hospital took responsibility - doc will see reports and the hospital will contact me to discuss if anything needs to be done.
I will get report in my mailbox and whatapp
WHAAAT?
Really? Yes.. 🤯🤯🤯🤯
6. I couldn't do the ultrasound today.. So booked me for next Thursday.
7. Then asked if there is anything else they can help with.
I said, well I do have an eye issue that has been bothering me but I never had a chance to meet a doc
Concierge says - " Let me check with the opthalmologist. If he can see you"
WHAAAAAAT???
🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯
8. Unfortunately no ophthalmologist slots available today ( Doctor is very popular)
So booked the slot right before my ultrasound next Thursday.
He already knew my next appointment time and offered the slot before that.
Because seamless data flows across departments
🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯
9. By design hospital has no printers, because, we are in 2025 :))
10. They have great coffee.
Everything- the flooring, the lighting ,the food, the beds, the waiting area, the lounge ..
Everything is designed patient first.
I was done by 10:15 .
I swear it took me longer to find parking in Sakra hospital.
Thanks Varun for building this❤️
More power to you and Superhealth.
May you succeed beyond your wildest expectations ❤️
Try Superhealth
I hope more hospitals learn and follow suit.
PS:
I wanted a photo with a logo/name but they don't have one because they want the space to feel like 'home'
🤯🤯🫡🫡🫡🫡❤️❤️❤️
I've said this before but it's worth repeating: World history is defined by the following simple rule. There are two groups on either side of a river. Each covets various resources from the other group. The only thing that stops a perpetual conflict between the two groups is the realization by each group that the other will respond in equal measure (or worse) if attacked. Now imagine that the West has decided to throw away this defining dynamic that shapes this fundamental historical reality. Defending what is ours is rooted in our genes; it is a central feature of our human nature. But the West has said that we are so progressive, so empathetic, so enligteneed that we are not bound by pediastrian biology. Hence, we will not defend our culture; we will not defend our heritage; we will not defend our religion; we will not defend our women; we will not defend our children; we will not defend our values. According to our Western leaders, only barbarians worry about such defensive concerns. We are open, tolerant, kind, compassionate, welcoming. No amount of evidence can convince us that other groups might do us harm. And hence, we brainwash our children who become our politicians; we rejoice in the rape of our societies because this proves that we are kind. It is a mixture of what I discussed in The Parasitic Mind and what I'll be presenting to the world in my next book Suicidal Empathy. I frankly am running out of optimism; I'm bereft of hope. I fight every day at great personal and professional cost. But how can you change anything when your society is hellbent on committing orgiastic suicide?