VIKAND marks 15 years driving shift to predictive healthcare at sea
Maritime healthcare is undergoing a structural transformation, shifting from reactive treatment to proactive, data-informed and increasingly predictive care. As VIKAND marks its 15th anniversary, the company is highlighting the role it has played in helping lead this evolution across the global maritime industry.
VIKAND’s journey began in the cruise sector, where its founders worked as maritime medical professionals and saw firsthand the need for a more integrated and preventive approach to healthcare at sea. Early clients included Semester at Sea and SeaDream Yacht Club, partnerships that helped shape the company’s belief that healthcare onboard is directly linked to safety, operational continuity and effective risk management. From those cruise roots, VIKAND has expanded to serve all major maritime segments, including commercial shipping, yachting, fishing and offshore energy.
A key differentiator for VIKAND is that its medical professionals have firsthand experience working at sea. This practical understanding of shipboard life informs how the company designs healthcare systems that are realistic, responsive and aligned with operational demands.
Under the leadership of CEO Peter Hult and Chief Medical Officer Dr Bill Heymann, the organisation evolved beyond traditional shipboard medicine to develop comprehensive healthcare systems centred on prevention, early intervention and long-term resilience. Over time, VIKAND has seen maritime health needs extend beyond isolated medical incidents to a broader healthcare mission, one that recognises the growing connection between crew welfare, performance, operational reliability and risk management.
Between 2016 and 2020, VIKAND significantly broadened its capabilities to include medical management, biomedical support, mental health services, medical escorts and public health expertise — marking a decisive shift away from fragmented, incident-based care toward fully integrated, proactive healthcare delivery across fleets.
This model faced its most significant test during the COVID-19 pandemic, when VIKAND supported cruise operators and other maritime organisations worldwide with public health leadership, outbreak response, crew training programmes and mental health services. The company’s contribution to the industry was recognised in 2022 with the Seatrade Cruise Supplier of the Year Award.
Today, VIKAND applies the experience and systems refined in the cruise sector to the commercial shipping industry and beyond, helping operators adopt a more structured, preventive and data-informed approach to crew healthcare. VIKAND manages more than 110,000 medical encounters annually and maintains thousands of biomedical devices at sea, while continuing to expand remote healthcare delivery, environmental monitoring and data-driven health insights through strategic technology partnerships.
In 2023, VIKAND introduced OneHealth by VIKAND, an integrated framework linking physical health, mental wellbeing and environmental factors to provide a more complete understanding of risk at sea — an approach designed to support the full spectrum of maritime operations.
“Fifteen years ago, we started with a simple belief formed from our experience onboard ships that healthcare at sea should never be purely reactive,” said Peter Hult, CEO of VIKAND. “What began in the cruise industry has grown into a global model that now supports every major maritime sector. We are seeing a much stronger link between crew health, performance and operational resilience, and that is reshaping how the industry thinks about risk.”
Crew expectations are also evolving. Access to reliable, high-quality healthcare is increasingly viewed as a fundamental part of working life at sea, while shipowners and operators value the reassurance of having expert support available, whether managing a minor injury or responding to a serious medical emergency.
“Our role is to make sure no one onboard feels unsupported,” Mr Hult added. “From a hand injury to a heart attack, operators need to know a specialist maritime health team is there to guide them. At the same time, we’re using data and experience to help prevent incidents before they happen and that is the future of maritime healthcare.”
Fifteen years on, VIKAND remains focused on helping maritime operators build safer, more resilient operations by placing proactive and predictive healthcare at the centre of life at sea.