India and Japan Forge Stronger Healthcare Ties and Supply Chains

India and Japan held the third Joint Committee Meeting on Healthcare in New Delhi, committing to deeper cooperation in healthcare systems and medical supply chains. The meeting, co-chaired by Union Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda and Japan's Minister Kimi Onoda, focused on digital health, non-communicable diseases, and workforce development. India highlighted its Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission and pharmaceutical manufacturing capabilities, while Japan shared its expertise in AI-enabled medical technologies and public-private collaboration. Both sides reaffirmed their commitment to inclusive development and innovation for better health outcomes.

Key Points: India, Japan Commit to Stronger Healthcare & Supply Chains

  • India and Japan held 3rd Joint Committee Meeting on Healthcare
  • Both nations commit to stronger healthcare systems and resilient supply chains
  • Focus areas include digital health, NCDs, and human resource development
  • India highlights Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission; Japan shares AI and digital health expertise
2 min read

India, Japan commit to stronger healthcare systems, resilient supply chains

India and Japan deepen healthcare cooperation at 3rd JCM, focusing on resilient supply chains, digital health, and workforce development.

"The meeting reflected the shared commitment of both countries to strengthen cooperation in the health sector. - Jagat Prakash Nadda"

New Delhi, May 5

The third Joint Committee Meeting on Healthcare between India and Japan was held here on Tuesday, with both sides committing to deepen cooperation for stronger healthcare systems, resilient medical supply chains and enhanced collaboration in digital health, medical innovation and workforce development.

The meeting was co-chaired by Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Jagat Prakash Nadda and Japan's Minister in charge of Healthcare Policy, Kimi Onoda.

Nadda said the meeting reflected the shared commitment of both countries to strengthen cooperation in the health sector.

He noted that India-Japan collaboration in healthcare is guided by the Memorandum of Cooperation in Healthcare and Wellness and a shared vision of improving accessibility, strengthening health systems and promoting innovation for better health outcomes.

The long-standing and multifaceted relationship between India and Japan reiterated India's commitment to inclusive development under the guiding principle of 'Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas', according to the minister.

According to him, the JCM serves as a vital platform to advance bilateral healthcare cooperation.

Meanwhile, Onoda said Japan remains committed to strengthening engagement in healthcare cooperation through innovation, technology and research, and expressed readiness to further deepen bilateral collaboration.

Additionally, welcoming the Japanese delegation, Union Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava said India and Japan share a partnership built on mutual respect, trust and a common vision for the future.

During the meeting, both sides held detailed discussions across major priority areas such as supply chain, digital health, and human resource.

On non-communicable diseases (NCDs), India highlighted its growing disease burden and presented its response framework based on screening, continuum of care and health promotion aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals.

While Japan shared its ongoing cooperation initiatives, including cancer screening, early diagnosis and capacity-building projects.

On supply chain resilience and access to medical products, India highlighted its pharmaceutical and medical devices manufacturing capabilities and efforts to strengthen domestic production and ensure affordable access. Japan shared its model of public-private collaboration to enhance medical supply chains and technology deployment.

On digital health, India has outlined its 'Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission', which is enabling an interoperable and citizen-centric digital health ecosystem. Similarly, Japan shared its experience in digitalisation, AI-enabled medical technologies and collaborative research.

On human resource development, India highlighted its skilled healthcare workforce ecosystem and exchange programmes, while Japan outlined ongoing cooperation in joint research and personnel exchange initiatives.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Great initiative! The focus on supply chain resilience is crucial post-pandemic. India's pharma manufacturing and Japan's tech innovation can create a powerful synergy. Hoping for less bureaucracy in implementation though.
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Priya S
The Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission being showcased here is a big deal. If we can integrate Japan's AI capabilities with our digital health ecosystem, it could revolutionise rural healthcare access. But we need proper data privacy laws first! 😅
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Vikram M
While this sounds promising, I wish such collaborations would also focus on mental health infrastructure. We're seeing rising depression and anxiety among youth, but it's rarely discussed at these high-level meets. Japan has good models we could learn from.
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Rohit P
India highlighting its pharma manufacturing capabilities is spot on. We're the pharmacy of the world, and Japan's public-private model can help us make supply chains even stronger. Let's hope this reduces our dependence on Chinese APIs. 🇮🇳💪
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Kavya N
The focus on NCDs and cancer screening is much needed. Every year we lose so many lives to late diagnosis. If Japan's early detection tech can be made affordable here through this partnership, it will save countless lives. But implementation is key - we need it at primary health centre level, not just metros.
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Ananya

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