Copyright yourstory

India's healthcare story is changing every day in research labs, startup hubs, and district hospitals across the country. As the sector moves toward a $650 billion mark by 2025, the challenge is making care reach everyone. Emerging technology is now bridging the lag between research labs and real patient care, opening the door to more accessible healthcare. Innovation needs to travel as easily to a farmer in Punjab as it does to an executive in Bengaluru. Why AI is important There is still a big difference between accessing healthcare in cities versus rural areas. Most doctors and advanced hospitals are in cities, but most people live outside of them. The high cost of treatment makes it even harder to get good care. Smart systems are closing the gaps in healthcare by facilitating doctors to diagnose more quickly, thus making medical research more reliable and improving how care reaches patients. These improvements could add significant value to the country by lowering research costs, speeding up treatment, and bringing healthcare closer to where people live. Research and development Finding new drugs and making medical devices have always taken a long time and cost a lot of money. Scientists can now test their ideas, look at how molecules interact, and get trial results much faster, owing to intelligent systems. The World Economic Forum says that India's healthcare innovators are using more integrated technologies to formulate drugs, diagnose diseases, and design medical devices. The AI-based medical diagnostics market in the country touched $12.87 million in 2024 and is expected to grow until 2030, according to Research and Markets. Rules are also getting stricter. The Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation wants to devise new rules for devices to make sure they are safe and of good quality. Local innovation is also being supported at the same time. The Andhra Pradesh MedTech Zone has started a programme called i-Passport to help researchers and startups develop prototypes quickly. This mix of rules and support for the ecosystem is helping to lower costs and reliance on imported technology. From the lab to the patient Funding and regulatory issues keep many new treatments from reaching patients. Smart research tools are helping to solve this problem by making it easier to guess how well something will work, supporting virtual trials, and making risk assessment better. Recent examples show what a good translation looks like. India's homegrown haemodialysis machine, RENALYX – RxT 21, uses smart technology and makes kidney care more affordable for many more people. A health project in Punjab that used predictive triage from a screening tool provided by Qure.ai to find stroke cases has checked more than 700 patients. A few of them got advanced brain clot removal procedures for free. There are also tools being made for chest X-rays and spinal MRI scans that will be used in regional hospitals. This shows that these kinds of solutions can work well when made locally. Making systems that can grow India needs a strong digital foundation to make these new ideas last. Health IDs from the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission and health records that can be used by different systems are important steps toward that goal. These systems help hospitals and clinics share information and work together better to provide care. Big companies from around the world are also putting money into India's infrastructure. Google's plan to build an artificial intelligence hub in Visakhapatnam for $15 billion will improve data processing, research, and connectivity. State programs are starting to make a real difference for ordinary people. In West Bengal, a breast cancer detection app is helping community health workers spot women at risk early, giving them a chance to get treatment in a timely manner. In Jhansi, the Smart City Hospital, a collaboration between the government and private partners, is making modern medical care available to low-income families at prices they can actually manage. These are the kind of stories that show how practical solutions, teamwork, and clear rules can turn healthcare from something distant and expensive into something people can actually rely on. Gains in affordability and efficiency Hospitals can see the visible benefits that smarter systems bring. They can make care both simpler and more accurate. By automating routine paperwork, scheduling, and data analysis, healthcare workers have more time to focus on patients. These systems also help avoid redundant tests and prevent people from making trips to the hospital when it is not needed. Research published in Nature Digital Medicine shows that token-based pricing models can lower the cost of diagnosis and make these tools more accessible for public hospitals. In Punjab, a stroke screening project demonstrated that identifying high-risk patients early reduced long-term treatment costs and improved survival rates. When used thoughtfully, these systems save money and improve care for both patients and providers. Problems that need attention India has made good progress, which is indeed visible, but some important issues still need fixing. Patient consent and data privacy often don’t get the attention they deserve. For technology to really work, it must be built on Indian data and designed for Indian conditions. When systems created abroad are used here without proper adaptation, they rarely give accurate results. There is also a shortage of trained people who can develop, test, and manage these systems. The World Economic Forum has pointed out that limited research capacity and weak data infrastructure slow things down. Also, many regulations can suppress new ideas. The National Medical Commission’s recent decision to stop live surgery broadcasts, aimed at preventing misuse, showed that it is extremely difficult to maintain a balance between ethics and innovation. India now has to concentrate on scaling up tested solutions beyond pilot programmes. Clinics and hospitals need implementable tools supported by physician, engineer, and policymaker training. The ecosystem will be strengthened by funding research, university-business collaborations, and regional manufacturing. To ensure no one is left behind, solutions must work in local languages and in low-connectivity regions. Affordable, modern medical care is within reach. When healthcare becomes simpler, reasonably priced, and genuinely accessible, India can finally bring advanced treatment to the communities that have waited far too long. (Dr Sabine Kapasi is CEO of Enira Consulting, the founder of ROPAN Healthcare, and a UN advisor.) (Edited by Kanishk Singh) (Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of YourStory.)