Health and Well-being Week
Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam: India’s Global Vision for Equitable Healthcare
India
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), through ICMR as the nodal organization, will showcase India’s innovative strides in healthcare under the theme “Health and Well-being Week” (22nd–28th June 2025) at Expo 2025 Osaka. The display highlights advancements in infectious disease prevention, digital health, and community-centered healthcare delivery. Key exhibits include cutting-edge pandemic preparedness tools and groundbreaking initiatives such as drone-based healthcare delivery and mobile stroke units. Another key highlight is India's strides in affordable MedTech innovations, driven by the country's robust MedTech ecosystem. The showcase aims to emphasize India's contributions toward global health security, universal healthcare access, and well-being for all.*All speakers will participate online.
Recorded video available
Discussion
- Equitable Healthcare
| Transmission of simultaneous interpretation | Not provided |
|---|---|
| Language of interpretation | Japanese and English |
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Track Programme
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Time and
Date of
the event -
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2025.06.25[Wed]
10:00 ~ 12:30
(Venue Open 09:30)
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- Venue
- Theme Weeks Studio
Programme details
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audio.
ICMR will present a forward-looking showcase under the
sub-theme “Saving Lives,” aligning with SDG goals to address
global health challenges. Key highlights may include:
Infectious Disease Prevention: Featuring advancements such as
the One Health Mission, Mobile BSL-3 Labs, VRDL networks, and
India’s indigenous Vaccine-Covaxin Development Story.
Cell Therapy: CAR-T cell therapy by IIT Bombay & Tata
Memorial Hospital
MedTech Innovations: Demonstrating the pathway from concept to
adoption with cutting-edge medical technologies and assistive
technologies.
Well-being Initiatives: Featuring pioneering solutions such as
drone-assisted medicine delivery, IHCI for hypertension
control, and the Mission DELHI heart-attack initiative.
【Schedule】
10:00 AM- 10:05
Session Chair :Opening Remarks & Introduction
10:05 AM- 10:25 AM
Dr. Saritha Nair :Advancing Health Through Research
10:25 AM- 10:30 AM
Q&A :Audience Questions for Dr. Saritha Nair
10:30 AM- 10:50 AM
Dr. Pragya Yadav :Pandemic Preparedness in India
10:50 AM- 10:55 AM
Q&A :Audience Questions for Dr. Pragya Yadav
10:55 AM- 11:15 AM
Dr. Taruna Madan :Medtech Innovation Ecosystem in India
11:15 AM- 11:20 AM
Q&A :Audience Questions for Dr. Taruna Madan
11:20 AM- 11:40 AM
Dr. Sumit Agarwal :Innovative Health Care Delivery Solutions
11:40 AM- 11:45 AM
Q&A :Audience Questions for Dr. Sumit Agarwal
11:45 AM- 12:05 PM
Dr. Debojyoti Chakraborty :Advancing Genome Editing Therapies
for Resource Limited Settings
12:05 PM- 12:10 PM
Q&A :Audience Questions for Dr. Debojyoti Chakraborty
12:10 PM- 12:15 PM
Session Chair :Closing Remarks & Vote of Thanks
Reports
【Reflection】
The session “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam: India’s Global Vision for
Equitable Healthcare” served as a compelling showcase of
India’s comprehensive, inclusive, and forward-thinking
approach to healthcare delivery and innovation. Organised by
the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) through the
Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), this programme
presented a digital platform through which five distinguished
experts shared diverse models and breakthroughs developed
within India’s public health ecosystem.
Dr. Saritha Nair opened the session by emphasising India’s
intent to present scalable, locally-rooted healthcare
innovations with global relevance. The phrase “Vasudhaiva
Kutumbakam”—meaning “The world is one family”—set the thematic
tone for the session, which underscored India’s commitment to
global health equity through open-source innovation,
public-private collaboration, and grassroots engagement.
The presentations demonstrated how India has developed
effective models that address infectious diseases,
non-communicable conditions, digital health inclusion, and
emergency response. Dr. Pragya Yadav presented India’s
advances in biosafety and pandemic preparedness, stressing the
critical role of ICMR-NIOH in ensuring rapid, science-based
responses during outbreaks. Her talk illustrated India’s
robust laboratory surveillance network and risk communication
tools.
Dr. Taruna Madan Gupta highlighted translational research
initiatives that connect bench science with real-world impact,
especially in areas like vaccine development and diagnostic
innovation. Meanwhile, Dr. Sumit Agarwal showcased the iDrone
programme, an initiative that uses drones to deliver essential
medical supplies to hard-to-reach populations—bridging
geographic and infrastructural gaps.
Dr. Debojyoti Chakraborty closed the series with a
presentation on gene-editing and cell therapy innovations,
indicating India’s growing footprint in next-generation
therapies and personalised medicine. He reflected on how
India’s cost-effective and frugal innovation models make
high-end healthcare technologies accessible to emerging
markets.
What emerged collectively was a narrative of resilience,
innovation, and equity. Each speaker emphasised
accessibility—not just affordability but logistical reach,
data access, and inclusivity in health service design. The
programme stood out for integrating technological
sophistication with deep contextual awareness.
A key strength of this session was its focus on replicability
and adaptability. Each initiative was presented not merely as
a national success story, but as a transferable model capable
of informing global health efforts, especially across the
Global South.
In essence, the programme reflected India’s aspiration not
only to lead in health innovation, but to do so in partnership
with the world—positioning equity, technology, and solidarity
as pillars of its healthcare vision.
【Post EXPO Initiatives】
Following the session, several post-Expo initiatives are being
explored to build upon India’s showcase and facilitate
international collaboration in equitable healthcare delivery.
First, the ICMR has expressed interest in forming bilateral
research partnerships focused on infectious disease
surveillance, especially in the Indo-Pacific and African
regions. India’s biosafety expertise and low-cost diagnostics
present attractive areas for joint piloting of real-time
pathogen tracking and emergency response frameworks.
Second, the iDrone programme is expected to enter a phase of
global scalability testing. Discussions are underway to pilot
its application in disaster-prone or remote regions beyond
India—offering logistical support in areas where medical
access remains severely limited. A proposal to co-host a
“Global Drone Health Delivery Symposium” in 2026 is under
internal review.
Third, the ICMR and partner institutions aim to expand the
global adoption of India’s open-access MedTech innovations.
This includes licensing portable diagnostics, modular stroke
units, and AI-based triage tools for community healthcare
settings. An Open Health Innovation Exchange Platform—where
low-cost technologies can be shared with LICs (low-income
countries)—is currently in conceptual development.
Further, academic and policy dialogues initiated at the Expo
may lead to the establishment of a South-South Health
Innovation Alliance, uniting countries from Asia, Africa, and
Latin America in building shared infrastructure for research,
health data governance, and capacity-building.
In summary, the India Health Showcase at Expo 2025 serves not
only as a window into national progress, but as a springboard
for global partnerships anchored in equity, scalability, and
co-development—making “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” a living,
actionable ethos in global health.
Cast
Speakers
Dr.Saritha Nair
Head Policy and Communications Division
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Dr. Pragya Yadav
Director-in-Charge, ICMR-NIOH
Infectious Disease Preparations
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Dr. Taruna Madan Gupta
Head, Development Division
MedTech Innovation
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Dr. Sumit Agarwal
PO, iDRONE Program
Healthcare Delivery
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Dr.Debojyoti Chakraborty
Principle Scientist, IGIB, India
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Health and Well-being Week
Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam: India’s Global Vision for Equitable Healthcare
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW), through ICMR as the nodal organization, will showcase India’s innovative strides in healthcare under the theme “Health and Well-being Week” (22nd–28th June 2025) at Expo 2025 Osaka. The display highlights advancements in infectious disease prevention, digital health, and community-centered healthcare delivery. Key exhibits include cutting-edge pandemic preparedness tools and groundbreaking initiatives such as drone-based healthcare delivery and mobile stroke units. Another key highlight is India's strides in affordable MedTech innovations, driven by the country's robust MedTech ecosystem. The showcase aims to emphasize India's contributions toward global health security, universal healthcare access, and well-being for all.*All speakers will participate online.
-
2025.06.25[Wed]
10:00~12:30
(Venue Open 09:30)
- Theme Weeks Studio
OTHER PROGRAM
Health and Well-being Week
