Connect with us

Technology

Winning firms will focus on what they can control, weather the rest, as triple-shock brakes private equity’s latest revival –Bain & Company 2026 Midyear PE report

Published

on

Trifecta of early-year shocks puts brakes on global PE’s latest revival for a second consecutive year as ‘Groundhog Day’ dynamic hits dealmaking again

Winning firms need to lean into value creation, AI adoption, disciplined bets, talent and operational execution as PE confronts a more challenging era

MSCI data shows ‘SaaSpocalypse’ hit private software valuations less than listed SaaS players – even as investors refocus on more AI-proof sectors; separate MSCI analysis shows over 75% of assets still exit at valuations above next-to-last marks, maintaining historical pattern

Ontra’s NDA-based leading indicator for PE deal activity points to deal flow remaining roughly flat through July 2026: stable, but far from a broad-based recovery

BOSTON and LONDON, June 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The global private equity recovery that was gathering momentum at the start of this year has stalled once again, as three rapid-fire market shocks dampened dealmaking, fundraising, and exit activity in the first half of the year, Bain & Company concludes in its 2026 Private Equity Midyear Report, released today.

But as the PE industry grapples with the latest market disruptions, Bain urges that winning PE players should focus on what they can control, while weathering other challenges. The best placed firms will lean into value creation plans, including proactively harnessing AI, and focus scarce resources on disciplined bets to create a true ‘right to win’, Bain advises.

Today’s report charts an 18-month-long ‘Groundhog Day’ dynamic in global PE. A year ago, early optimism was dashed by tariff turmoil. This year, the buyout market had largely shaken off those concerns, with dealmaking back on the rise, only for that revival to be derailed once again. This time, the setback was triggered by abrupt jolts, in quick succession, from an AI-driven rout in software valuations, redemption stress in private credit, and the energy price spike triggered by the Iran conflict.

Bain’s analysis finds that, by midyear, the reversal in PE market conditions sparked by these shocks has been sharp and wide-ranging: bid-ask spreads have widened, investment committees have pulled back, and recovering exit momentum has again run out of steam. Select PE transactions do continue to clear at high prices, but these deals are mostly those involving top-tier assets, Bain reports.

Yet despite these headwinds, Bain’s analysis also emphasizes a backdrop for PE dealmakers where there is nothing fundamentally broken in financial markets. Pumped-up public equities continue to defy gravity, the global economy remains in expansion mode, debt markets are open, and there is abundant dry powder to fund deals.

With intensifying pressure on PE general partners (GPs) to buy and sell companies, Bain concludes that it would not take much to unlock a wave of new dealmaking in the second half of 2026, but cautions that a truly sustained PE upturn will depend on the market finding a more fundamental equilibrium lasting more than a quarter or two.

“There’s no question the fog will lift eventually – it always does. The firms best positioning themselves to lead out of the present slump are giving intense attention to what they can control now, not what they can’t,” said Hugh MacArthur, chairman of the global PE practice at Bain & Company. “Private equity has entered a much more difficult and competitive era. Generating consistent outperformance will require an ever-sharper strategic focus and, crucially, the disciplined value creation system to back it up.”

Bain’s analysis sets out a clear prescription for PE’s demanding new era under which leading firms can shape a differentiated right to win, building repeatable models for underwriting deals and operational value creation. With hold periods for PE portfolios lengthening, firm resources constrained, and persistent market disruption, Bain also cautions that for PE players the premium on specialization, operational capability, talent, and disciplined execution to set the conditions for success has never been higher.

“The hard work done in market downturns to develop competitive capabilities is often what determines who leads in the next cycle,” said Rebecca Burack, head of the global Private Equity practice at Bain & Company. “The uncertainty that’s slowing down dealmaking will resolve eventually. The critical opportunity right now is to determine where you can win, and to dig in to make it happen.”

Dislocations leave green and red zones for dealmakers as technology valuations slump

Amid 2026’s ‘Groundhog Day’ dynamic of market revival followed by renewed retreat, Bain’s analysis of the first-half’s dislocations finds a general slowdown in investment and buyout activity, but with an uneven trend across sectors. With the PE industry’s overhang of dry powder, GPs are being forced to hunt for deals where they can find them, across ‘green zones’ where greater conviction exists, and ‘red zones’ for sectors suffering the greatest uncertainty.

The technology sector falls somewhere in between these green and red zones, Bain concludes. As anxieties over AI’s impact clouded valuations for the tech industry, and particularly the software sector, tech deal value slumped by 70% from Q4 2025 to Q1 2026, as fewer large software transactions cleared, the analysis notes.

Proprietary data shows ‘SaaSpocalypse’ hit private software valuations less, even as investors refocus on more ‘AI-proof’ sectors

Bain’s report also provides the first concrete view of how that AI-fueled uncertainty and so-called ‘SaaSpocalypse’ in software have translated into private company valuations in software and tech, via a proprietary MSCI analysis of Q1 buyout marks. Through March 31, software valuations in PE portfolios declined by roughly 8% overall. This was far less than the corresponding public market correction affecting the sector, but still meaningful. The decline was also notably more muted in Europe, where software marks fell 4.2%, versus 8.9% in the US.

As tech-focused GPs adjust to the new realities of an AI-inflected world, Bain’s analysis warns that uncertainty over tech and software companies’ valuations is likely to persist for buyers and sellers, as well as in other sectors significantly impacted by AI. In the meantime, Bain reports that PE firms are rotating capital and investment resources towards businesses perceived as less exposed to near-term AI disruption and macro volatility as PE firms seek deals that allow underwriting confidence.

Deal cost index shows record high, intensifying imperative for ‘new math’ on value creation and stronger earnings

Bain’s analysis also sets out a ‘deal cost index’ combining purchase multiples and financing costs that have been pushed up by interest rate levels. A record level for this index shows that PE deals are now arguably more expensive than at any point in the industry’s history, Bain finds. It notes that while entry multiples have occasionally been higher in the past, and interest rates have been higher in some periods, the combined measure is near all-time highs.

The expensiveness of deals in turn magnifies the imperative for PE to generate operational value and earnings growth, the report observes. Bain’s ’12 is the new 5′ framework, introduced in its 2026 Global PE Report, captures the new math needed: a deal that required only 5% annual EBITDA growth to generate a 2.5x return a decade ago now requires closer to around 10% to 12%.

NDA data points to stable short-term conditions but with signs of a broad-based upturn still to be seen

Considering the outlook for PE for the rest of 2026, Bain examines a leading indicator of likely prospects, using early signal data from Ontra, an AI workflow platform for private markets that processes a significant volume of the industry’s non-disclosure agreements (NDAs).

Historically, there has been a strong correlation between NDA activity and deal closings roughly three months later. Bain reports that the latest Ontra NDA data points to PE deal activity remaining roughly flat through July 2026, signaling stable conditions but with signs of a broad-based recovery still to emerge.

Exit logjam and liquidity crunch persist but MSCI data shows valuation marks still hold at realization

Alongside investments, PE exit activity also remains stalled, with Bain reporting little signs of progress towards easing the industry’s exit logjam or the resulting liquidity crunch that has slowed the PE capital cycle for years, despite optimism on this at the end of last year.

The industry is coming off a four-year stretch of record-low distributions as a percentage of net asset value (NAV), with the implied capital cycle and holding periods for PE assets now running to approximately seven years – well beyond historical norms. In parallel, PE firms are sitting on around 33,000 unsold portfolio companies.

Growing tension around valuations reflects a self-reinforcing dynamic in the GP-LP model, Bain suggests. A recent poll by the Institutional Limited Partners Association (ILPA) found a majority of LPs losing confidence in any GP when the discount to last mark for assets exceeds 5% on a full exit. Bain’s analysis finds that this is creating a powerful incentive for GPs to hold on to portfolio companies and wait for them to “grow into” marks, rather than risk a markdown that could prove fatal to fundraising. Yet the longer assets sit, the more LPs question whether stated valuations reflect intrinsic value.

Despite these tensions, today’s report cites a second proprietary MSCI analysis that offers the more reassuring data point that roughly 75% of buyout assets are still exiting above their next-to-last quarterly mark – the GP valuation preceding the final mark before sale, and a cleaner measure of valuation accuracy before significant price discovery occurs during an active sale process. This is broadly consistent with historical patterns, suggesting that in spite of growing skepticism about private market valuations, the premium that buyers have historically paid above marks on exit has not disappeared.

Fundraising remains a grind as LP patience sees its limits tested

With exits continuing to drag and the impact on PE’s liquidity and capital cycle preventing the return of capital to LPs, fundraising by GPs also remains mired in the doldrums, Bain reports. It notes that fundraising is the last part of the capital flywheel to recover during PE upturns, with current conditions proving this again.

Overall momentum in fundraising remains uninspiring despite several headline fund closings so far in 2026, including KKR’s North America Fund XIV and Bain Capital’s Asia Fund VI, Bain says. It concludes that this reflects a bifurcated market in which funds with strong distributions to LPs in relation to paid-in capital (DPI) and internal rates of return (IRR), can still hit targets quickly, but where the broader picture remains difficult.

In what Bain suggests may be an early warning sign for GPs, a recent ILPA poll found that while a large majority of LPs are maintaining or increasing their buyout allocations, roughly one in five indicated that they are reducing allocations to buyouts through the strategic asset allocation process, due to liquidity pressures or concerns about long-term returns. With negotiating leverage continuing to shift in the LPs’ favor, winning a fresh funding commitment now comes at an increasing cost in terms of fees or co-investment for the average GP, Bain cautions

Controlling the controllable: four imperatives for winning firms

Bain’s report identifies four principles defining the firms best positioned to lead out of the current slump:

Apply the new deal math: With purchase multiples and financing costs simultaneously at record highs, maintaining past performance requires a dramatically increased focus on value creation—and the specialized capabilities to execute it rapidly.Lean hard into AI as an accelerator: AI is rapidly becoming one of private equity’s most important value creation levers. Inaction has become a strategic choice, not a neutral decision. The companies seeing the greatest impact are redesigning workflows, strengthening data foundations, and scaling use cases that change the economics of the business.Don’t get caught in the middle: The holding period’s middle phase is where value creation is most often lost. With duration risk to be managed aggressively, sponsors must take a disciplined approach to refreshing value creation plans—while also resetting management incentives and talent where needed.Focus resources on the winners: Portfolio resources are limited while active portfolio company counts have roughly doubled over the last decade. There is more value in turning a 3x deal into a 5x than a 1x into a 1.5x. The biggest overall return often comes from making winners even better, not spreading resources evenly.

Media contacts
Dan Pinkney (Boston) — Email: dan.pinkney@bain.com
Gary Duncan (London) — Email: gary.duncan@bain.com
Ann Lee (Singapore) — Email: ann.lee@bain.com

About Bain & Company
Bain & Company works with leaders worldwide to solve their toughest challenges and deliver enduring results. Since 1973, we’ve partnered with clients, including private equity and portfolio companies, to build the capabilities they need to stay ahead of change and help them redefine their industries. We measure our success by our clients’ success, and we proudly hold the highest levels of client advocacy in our field.

Bain is consistently recognized globally as one of the best places to work. We operate as one global team, uniting strategists, industry and functional experts, technologists, and advisors with a vibrant ecosystem of technology partners.  

Notes to Editors
Bain & Company was founded in 1973 and today has 19,000 employees across 67 cities in 40 countries. We have worked with more than two-thirds of the Global 500 and more than 9,000 companies worldwide. Bain has pledged to deliver $2 billion in pro bono consulting to nonprofit, public-sector and charitable organizations by 2035. The firm is consistently recognized as a Leader in major analyst rankings across multiple areas, including digital business, innovation, strategy, experience design, customer experience, and carbon-zero transformation.

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/winning-firms-will-focus-on-what-they-can-control-weather-the-rest-as-triple-shock-brakes-private-equitys-latest-revival-bain–company-2026-midyear-pe-report-302793107.html

SOURCE Bain & Company

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Technology

PR Newswire Signs Affiliate Membership with PRCAI to Strengthen India’s Communications Ecosystem

Published

on

By

– Partnership underscores commitment to ethical standards, AI-era visibility, and collaborative industry growth

MUMBAI, India, June 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Leading global press release distribution platform PR Newswire today announced its Affiliate Membership with Public Relations Consultants Association of India (PRCAI), India’s premium communications body.

Through this partnership, PR Newswire will participate in PRCAI’s industry forums, thought leadership platforms, and Industry discussions, while contributing to initiatives that strengthen professional standards and elevate best practices across the sector.

“India’s communications industry is at a pivotal moment, shaped by digital transformation with AI-driven visibility, and evolving stakeholder expectations. Our partnership with PRCAI is a step towards achieving this and strengthening the network for faster and better results,” noted Winston D’Souza, Business Head, PR Newswire India.

This collaboration was lauded by Amit Yadav, Business Head, PR Newswire India, too. “Our affiliate membership with PRCAI reflects our commitment to supporting industry dialogue, enabling knowledge exchange, and contributing to the professionalization of PR and corporate communications in India,” he said.

This partnership will allow PR Newswire to: 

Become a practicing member of the Client–Consultancy Partnership Charter;Publish and showcase thought leadership content via PRCAI channels;Create speaker and engagement opportunities at PRCAI flagship initiatives and in industry reports;Allow exclusive/subsidized access to trainings and learning programs, masterclasses, and HR forums;Have a key presence on the PRCAI website, and connect to 180+ member network.

Winston D’Souza & Amit Yadav jointly head PR Newswire India and have been instrumental in the market expansion and financial performance. Both have spent over 15 years with PR Newswire, playing a key role in strengthening and growing the brand’s presence in India.

By decentralizing executive decisions and doubling leadership oversight, the co-leaders have successfully scaled core operations, unlocked innovative revenue streams, and fostered a high-performance culture. Their unified direction has not only accelerated compound annual growth but also solidified the company’s position as a resilient industry leader in the press release distribution space.

About PR Newswire

PR Newswire is the industry’s leading press release distribution partner with an unparalleled global reach of more than 500,000 newsrooms, websites, direct feeds, journalists, and influencers, and is available in more than 170 countries and 40 languages. From our innovative AI-powered PR Newswire Amplify ™ platform, award-winning Content Services offerings, integrated media newsroom and microsite products, Investor Relations suite of services, paid placement and social sharing tools, PR Newswire has a comprehensive Multichannel Amplification™ catalogue of solutions to solve the modern-day challenges PR and communications teams face. For more than 70 years, PR Newswire has been the preferred destination worldwide for brands to share their most important news stories.

For more information, please visit www.prnewswire.com

About Cision

Cision is the global leader in consumer and media intelligence, engagement, and communication solutions. We equip PR and corporate communications, marketing, and social media professionals with the tools they need to excel in today’s data driven world. Our deep expertise, exclusive data partnerships, and award-winning products, including CisionOne , Brandwatch , Trajaan , and PR Newswire , enable over 75,000 companies and organizations, including 84% of the Fortune 500, to see and be seen, understand and be understood by the audiences that matter most to them.

About PRCAI

Founded in 2001, the Public Relations Consultants Association of India (PRCAI) is the nation’s most credible and influential communications body. For over two and a half decades, PRCAI has worked alongside its members to advance best practices, strengthen the profession, and nurture a world-class PR and communications ecosystem in India and beyond. With 180 member firms and thousands of practitioners, PRCAI champions ethical standards, talent development, innovation, and industry collaboration to build a globally competitive and future-ready communications ecosystem that contributes meaningfully to India’s business, cultural, and nation-building agenda. For more information about PRCAI, visit www.prcai.org.

For questions, contact the team at CisionPR@cision.com 

Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2244701/PR_Newswire_Logo.jpg

 

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/in/news-releases/pr-newswire-signs-affiliate-membership-with-prcai-to-strengthen-indias-communications-ecosystem-302792617.html

Continue Reading

Technology

Everything-PR Names the 100 People Shaping What AI Engines Say

Published

on

By

Inaugural ranking maps lab principals, policy architects, discovery infrastructure builders, and the editorial substrate behind ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews. Methodology published.

MIAMI, June 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Everything-PR, the intelligence platform for communications, reputation, AI visibility, and digital discovery in the answer-engine era, today published The AI Communications 100 — its inaugural annual ranked index of the 100 people shaping what AI engines retrieve, synthesize, and answer.

ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews now mediate a growing share of buyer research, journalist sourcing, regulatory inquiry, and consumer discovery. The figures who shape what those engines say form a new class — distinct from traditional public relations, search engine optimization, and advertising. The AI Communications 100 identifies them.

Ten lanes. One hundred figures.

The index organizes the 100 across ten lanes of influence:

Lane 1 — Lab & Infrastructure Principals: Sam Altman (#1), Elon Musk (#2), Jensen Huang (#3), Demis Hassabis (#4), Dario Amodei (#5).Lane 2 — Answer Engine Builders: Aravind Srinivas (Perplexity), Liz Reid (Google), Mustafa Suleyman (Microsoft AI).Lane 3 — Policy & Governance: Helen Toner, Anu Bradford, Lina Khan.Lane 4 — Critics & Theorists: Geoffrey Hinton, Yoshua Bengio, Fei-Fei Li, Gary Marcus.Lane 5 — Open-Source & Decentralized AI: Yann LeCun, Clément Delangue, Arthur Mensch, Andrej Karpathy.Lane 6 — Journalists & Analysts: Casey Newton, Kara Swisher, Cade Metz, Karen Hao.Lane 7 — Lab Communications, Safety & Evaluation Operators: Jan Leike, Beth Barnes, Paul Christiano, Hannah Wong.Lane 8 — AI Discovery & Visibility Infrastructure: Matthew Prince (Cloudflare), James Cadwallader (Profound), Edo Liberty (Pinecone), Harrison Chase (LangChain).Lane 9 — Investors as Narrative Shapers: Marc Andreessen, Reid Hoffman, Vinod Khosla.Lane 10 — Foundations: Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia), Steve Huffman (Reddit), Tim Berners-Lee.

Methodology

Inclusion is editorial, governed by three filters: material influence on what AI engines retrieve, cite, or refuse to discuss; verifiable public record; and active in 2026. Curation is by the Everything-PR editorial team. Submissions are reviewed quarterly. The full methodology is published alongside the ranking.

On the record

“AI engines are the new shelf. The figures named in this ranking are the people who shape what those engines surface — and what they refuse to. Communications now operates through them, whether the profession has caught up or not.” — Ronn Torossian, publisher of Everything-PR

Access

The full ranking is published at everything-pr.com/ai-communications-100-2026. The methodology is at everything-pr.com/ai-communications-100-methodology. Lane deep-dives publish on a rolling cadence through Q3 2026. The 2027 edition refreshes in Q1 of next year.

About Everything-PR

Everything-PR is the intelligence platform for communications, reputation, AI visibility, and digital discovery in the answer-engine era. Publishing since 2009. Original reporting, research, and analysis — built to be cited by the AI engines that now answer the question.

About the publisher

Ronn Torossian is the founder and chairman of 5W AI Communications, the AI Communications Firm. He is the publisher of Everything-PR and the author of two best-selling editions of For Immediate Release.

Disclosure

Everything-PR and 5W AI Communications share common ownership. Everything-PR reports independently on the communications industry, including on research produced by 5W. Editorial decisions are made by Everything-PR’s editorial team. Everything-PR does not accept payment for inclusion on the AI Communications 100.

Media Contact
Everything-PR Editorial
editorial@everything-pr.com
everything-pr.com/ai-communications-100-2026

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/everything-pr-names-the-100-people-shaping-what-ai-engines-say-302793684.html

SOURCE 5W Public Relations

Continue Reading

Technology

A New Lease of Life: Stories of Hope, Survivorship and Second Chances with Apollo Hospitals

Published

on

By

Cancer changes lives long before it changes medical reports.

NEW DELHI , June 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — It disrupts routines, alters plans, and tests families in ways they never imagined. It brings uncertainty, fear and difficult questions about the future. Yet for a growing number of cancer survivors, it is also becoming the beginning of a new chapter that is defined not by disease, but by resilience, hope and a renewed appreciation for life.

A 68-year-old Bengaluru resident never imagined that what seemed like fatigue and occasional digestive discomfort would lead to a diagnosis of advanced stomach cancer. When investigations revealed a large tumour in his stomach that had already spread to his liver, the prognosis was daunting. Alongside the cancer, obesity and other medical conditions made treatment even more complex. For him and his family, the diagnosis was overwhelming. The future suddenly felt uncertain. A multidisciplinary team led by Dr Poonam Maurya, Senior Consultant Medical Oncologist, Apollo Hospitals, Jayanagar, Bengaluru, developed a personalised treatment strategy designed not only to fight the disease but also to safely navigate the risks posed by his condition. Step by step, treatment progressed. What followed was a journey of courage, perseverance and trust. Today, more than two and a half years later, he remains cancer-free.

His story is a reminder that survivorship is not merely about completing treatment. It is about reclaiming life, rediscovering confidence, and finding joy in ordinary moments that once seemed uncertain.

For some families, survivorship begins even before cancer develops.

Raigad-based Shweta Harpude knows how the shadow cancer can cast across generations. Her mother succumbed to cervical cancer, while her sister was diagnosed with breast cancer. Having witnessed the disease touch multiple members of her family, she sought answers that could help protect the next generation. During her treatment for a BRCA1 gene mutation at Apollo Hospitals Navi Mumbai, doctors recognised the significance of her family history and advised genetic testing for her daughter, who was in her early thirties. The results revealed that she too carried the BRCA mutation.

What could have become another tragic chapter instead became an opportunity for prevention. Armed with knowledge, Shweta’s daughter now undergoes regular screening and monitoring, significantly improving the chances of detecting disease at its earliest and most treatable stage.

“These cases reinforce that cancer is not always sporadic. In many families, it runs in the genes. Early identification through genetic counselling and screening can save lives by enabling prevention and timely treatment,” says Dr Jyoti Bajpai, Lead, Medical Oncology, Apollo Hospitals Navi Mumbai.

Stories like these are becoming increasingly important as cancer continues to emerge as one of India’s most significant public health challenges. More than 15 lakh new cancer cases were reported in 2024, according to ICMR-NCRP estimates, and the numbers continue to rise.

Yet alongside this challenge, there is reason for optimism.

Advances in precision medicine, genomics, immunotherapy, robotics and radiation technology are transforming outcomes across cancer care. More patients are living longer, recovering faster and returning to meaningful lives after treatment.

Seventy-two-year-old Hira Nand Khurana from Delhi represents this new era of survivorship. A patient living with diabetes and history of cardiac bypass surgery, he was diagnosed with an aggressive bladder cancer. The diagnosis was particularly concerning because of his age, underlying health conditions and the complexity of the tumour. Using the advanced da Vinci Xi robotic surgical system, a team led by Dr Harshit Garg, Senior Consultant Uro-Oncologist and Robotic Surgeon at Indraprastha Apollo Hospitals, performed a complex radical cystectomy through minimally invasive surgery. The recovery surprised even his family. He was able to climb stairs by the third day after surgery and was discharged on the fourth day.

For many cancer patients, these milestones may appear small. Yet they represent something profound – the return of independence, confidence and normalcy.

“For decades, cancer treatment relied on a limited set of tools that often-affected healthy cells alongside cancerous ones. Today, we are entering an era of precision where treatment is increasingly personalised, targeted and less disruptive to patients’ lives,” says Dr Harshit Garg.

The future of cancer care is no longer measured only by survival rates. It is increasingly measured by how well patients live after treatment, how quickly they recover, how fully they return to their families, and how confidently they embrace life again.

The stories of these survivors remind us that while cancer may alter the course of life, it does not have to define it. Behind every diagnosis is a person, a family and a future worth fighting for.

For every survivor, the journey is different. Yet they share a common truth: cancer may have been part of their story, but it did not become the ending.

About Apollo Hospitals

Apollo revolutionised healthcare when Dr. Prathap Reddy opened the first hospital in Chennai in 1983. Today, Apollo is the world’s largest integrated healthcare platform with over 10,400 beds across 76 hospitals, 6,600+ pharmacies, 264 clinics, 2,182 diagnostic centres, and 800+ telemedicine centres. It is one of the world’s leading cardiac centers, having performed over 3,00,000 angioplasties and 2,00,000 surgeries. Apollo continues to invest in research and innovation to bring the most cutting-edge technologies, equipment, and treatment protocols to ensure patients have access to the best care in the world. Apollo’s 1,20,000 family members are dedicated to delivering exceptional care and leaving the world better than we found it.

 

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/in/news-releases/a-new-lease-of-life-stories-of-hope-survivorship-and-second-chances-with-apollo-hospitals-302793689.html

Continue Reading

Trending