
The $150 million medical cluster planned in Tashkent confirms that healthcare in Uzbekistan is developing in a structured, system-wide way rather than through isolated projects. It points to infrastructure that combines treatment, diagnostics, service capacity, and investment appeal in one ecosystem.
Initiatives like this create a multiplier effect across the market. As new healthcare facilities emerge, so does demand for modern equipment, consumables, logistics, technical support, and standardized supply processes for clinical environments.
For companies like Adina-Med, such projects matter because cluster-based development increases the value of a reliable importer and distributor. The larger the infrastructure, the more critical supplier reliability, documentation discipline, and responsiveness to professional buyers become.
Source