The revolution of healthcare delivery in India is leveraging AI-powered diagnostics, telemedicine, and surveillance tools across both public and private sectors. By integrating these frontier technologies, the Government of India is fulfilling its commitment to Universal Health Coverage—effectively bridging delivery gaps, elevating the standard of medical services and products, and ensuring affordable care for every citizen.

Guided by the vision of 'Welfare for All, Happiness for All' (Sarvajana Hitaya, Sarvajana Sukhaya), the Union Cabinet launched the IndiaAI mission in March 2024 to advance inclusive development, strengthen governance, and improve public service delivery—including healthcare. The mission embodies two core principles:

• Democratisation of technology, ensuring AI tools reach all segments of society including rural and underserved populations

• Technology for humanity, deploying AI not merely for technological advancement but to address critical societal challenges, improve quality of life, and advance the public good.
This comprehensive approach aims to transform healthcare delivery as part of India's journey toward Viksit Bharat by 2047.

The Union Government recognised AI’s transformative potential in healthcare delivery years ago. In 2018, the Niti Aayog published the National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence, which envisions AI, robotics and the Internet of Medical Things as the “new nervous system for healthcare”, among its myriad applications across various sectors.

AI-powered tools, adopted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare’s various national programmes, are democratising healthcare expertise across India. For example, these tools enable frontline workers to screen for TB and diabetic retinopathy while supporting 282 million telemedicine consultations nationwide. Together, these efforts have delivered measurable impact, including a 27% reduction in adverse TB outcomes and 12–16% increase in case detection.

India-AI Impact Summit 2026
India will host the Global South's first international AI summit in New Delhi from 16 to 20 February, bringing together global leaders, policymakers, technology firms, innovators, and experts. The summit will cover AI-centred policy, research, industry, and public engagement.

 
AI in Healthcare Delivery
 
AI has enabled better delivery of various public health initiatives by leveraging technology for public health impact. It demonstrates how technology-driven solutions can address persistent developmental challenges and promote inclusive and holistic social development. This reflects the spirit of Atmanirbhar Bharat and Viksit Bharat.
 
From 2022 to 2025, India has fundamentally restructured its public health delivery by integrating AI into a unified strategy, that bridges specialist shortages and scales proactive care. 

By deploying AI-enabled tools within the National TB Elimination Programme, the National Diabetic Retinopathy Screening Programme, and the Media Disease Surveillance System, the government has empowered non-specialists to perform high-level screenings, resulting in a 27% decline in adverse TB outcomes and over 4,500 outbreak alerts. 

This transformation is further solidified through the e-Sanjeevani, which has supported 282 million consultations with AI-assisted differential diagnosis, and the UdyogYantra AI System for malnutrition monitoring. 

This has created a comprehensive ecosystem that spans from infectious disease management and cancer care to the modernisation of traditional Ayurvedic medicine and the National One Health Programme.
 
AI-enabled initiatives by the Government of India (2022-2025) to improve public health delivery are:
 
Health Focus / AI Solution / Initiative / Process, Technology "Treatment" Experience/ Clinical-Operational Impact

TB Management
Adverse Outcome Prediction
Predictive Analytics: AI flags patients at high risk of treatment failure now treatment is initiated.
Reported 27% decline in adverse outcomes after nationwide deployment.
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TB Triage
DeepCXR (Chest X-ray)
Radiology AI: Automated reading of digital X-rays to identify nodules/cavities for presumptive TB cases.
Deployed in 8 State/UTs; available free of cost to the Govt to bypass specialist shortages.
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Diabetes (DR)
MadhuNetrAI
Retinal Triage: Non-specialists take retinal photos; AI grades them to prioritise urgent specialist referrals.
7,100 patients benefited across 38 facilities; India's first AI community screening program launched Dec 2025.
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Telemedicine
eSanjeevani CDSS
Differential Diagnosis: Streamlines patient complaints and provides AI-based differential diagnosis recommendations
282 million consultations benefitedfrom April 2023 to November 2025; 12 million aided specifically by AI-recommended diagnoses.
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Traditional Medicine
Ayurgenomics& Ayush Grid
Genomic-Ayurveda Hybrid: Uses AI to identify disease markers based on Prakriti (constitution types) and ancient texts.
Recognised by WHO (July 2025) as a global model for integrating AI with traditional knowledge.
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Cancer Care
Imaging Biobank
Database R&D: NITI Aayog is building a database of 20,000+ cancer patient profiles (radiology/pathology images).
Enables researchers to develop high-accuracy AI tools for early cancer detection and management.
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Health Fraud
AB-PMJAY Anti-Fraud
Integrity Management: AI/ML detects suspicious transactions and helps deterfraud in real-time within the PM-JAY scheme.
Shifts health scheme monitoring from reactive detection to proactive integrity management.
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Surveillance
Media Disease Surveillance (MDS)
Early Warning: AI scans national digital news sources for symptom clusters (e.g., mystery fevers).
Published 4,500+ event alerts since April 2022 to prevent regional outbreaks.
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The government has established a foundational layer to ensure these tools are safe and standardised:

• Centres of Excellence for Artificial Intelligence: Designated in March 2025, AIIMS Delhi, PGIMER Chandigarh, and AIIMS Rishikesh lead the development of indigenous AI solutions.[15] In addition, NHA has also inked an MoU with TANUH, Ministry of Education’s CoE in Healthcare at IISc Bengaluru to lead AI related developments in healthcare.

• National Federated Learning Platform: An MoU signed on October 14, 2024 between the National Health Authority (NHA) and IIT Kanpur to create an open benchmarking platform for validating AI health models using data from the ecosystem partners under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission.[16]  

• Ethical Oversight: All AI deployment follows the ICMR Ethical Guidelines (2023)[17] and MeitY AI Governance Guidelines to ensure privacy-by-design and secure data exchange.[18]

• Strategy for AI in Healthcare for India (SAHI): MoHFW is working on a health sector specific AI strategy. This strategy has been prepared after consultation with various public and private stakeholders.  
 

An Indian Administrative Service official was overseeing the Integrated Tribal Development Programme in Maharashtra's Etapalli district. He noticed clear signs of undernourishment in students despite government-funded meals. An audit of the Todsa Ashram School revealed that 27% of its students were malnourished. 

Gupta's solution was to modify the food fed to the children. An AI-enabled machine to evaluate food served against government-prescribed menus was introduced. It was equipped with advanced image recognition to analyse over 2,100 data points, including temperature and appearance.
 
After the machine was deployed, the analysis revealed that many meals did not match prescribed menus. The analysis showed that students often missed out on items like fruits or protein-rich components. 

Nutritional deficiencies were also exacerbated by inadequate preparation, overcooked vegetables, and spoiled ingredients. This AI-enabled machine helped the authorities enforce stricter compliance protocols and vendor accountability. It led to visible improvements in the children's nutrition. This successful model was replicated across multiple schools in the district.
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Regional Open Digital Health Summit 2025
The Regional Open Digital Health Summit 2025 was held in New Delhi on November 19-20. The summit was organised by the National Health Authority (NHA), Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, in collaboration with the National e-Governance Division (NeGD), Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, WHO South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO), and UNICEF. 

The summit convened policymakers, technologists, public health leaders, and global experts from across the WHO South-East Asia Region (SEAR). The discussions highlighted India’s journey in strengthening its digital health architecture through robust governance, open standards, and emerging technologies. 

The use of GenAI in healthcare, including AI-enabled surveillance and diagnosis, faster disease identification, early outbreak prediction, and support for frontline workers, was a key focus, alongside the integration of AI across other health programmes. 

The summit also saw representatives from Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and Timor-Leste; and senior officials from WHO-SEARO, UNICEF, and digital health leaders from SEAR Member States.
 
IndiaAI Mission’s Healthcare Initiatives
 
In March 2024, the Union Cabinet, chaired by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, approved the comprehensive national-level IndiaAI mission with a budget outlay of Rs 10,371.92 crorefor promoting India’s socio-economic development using AI.

The IndiaAI Mission initiatives are supporting innovation in AI-enabled healthcare applications. One of the pillars of the mission is the IndiaAI Application Development Initiative. 

This scheme aims to develop, scale, and promote the adoption of impactful AI solutions designed to tackle significant national challenges.  Advanced and efficient AI-enabled healthcare delivery is one of the many outcomes of this initiative.

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