India Chairs First BRICS Health Working Group Meeting for 2026 in New Delhi

India, as the 2026 BRICS Chair, hosted the first Health Working Group meeting in New Delhi, bringing together officials from member and invited countries. The meeting centered on the theme "Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability," aiming to strengthen collaborative public health frameworks. Union Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava outlined India's priorities, including fostering evidence-driven cooperation and proposing new focus areas like a "BRICS Mission for Healthy Lifestyles" and mental health promotion. The discussions also covered nine existing priority areas, from TB research to digital health, underscoring a comprehensive approach to global health challenges.

Key Points: India Hosts First BRICS Health Working Group Meeting for 2026

  • India chairs 2026 BRICS health talks
  • Focus on resilience and innovation
  • New priorities: healthy lifestyles and mental wellness
  • Emphasis on traditional medicine and equity
4 min read

Union Health Ministry hosts first BRICS health working group meeting 2026 in New Delhi

India chairs the inaugural BRICS health meeting for 2026, focusing on resilience, innovation, and new priorities like mental wellness and healthy lifestyles.

"foster inclusive, sustainable, and evidence-driven health cooperation - Union Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava"

New Delhi, April 16

The Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare on Wednesday chaired the First Health Working Group Meeting under the BRICS framework for 2026 in New Delhi.

The meeting brought together senior health officials, technical experts, and delegates from BRICS member countries--Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, the United Arab Emirates, and Indonesia to deliberate on priority areas of cooperation in public health.

As the BRICS Chair for 2026, India is guided by the overarching theme "Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability", reflecting a people-centric and humanity-first approach articulated by the Prime Minister at the 2025 Rio Summit.

The theme underscores India's commitment to strengthening collaborative frameworks that are responsive, inclusive, and future-ready, according to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

In her opening remarks, the Union Health Secretary Punya Salila Srivastava welcomed all BRICS member States and highlighted the significance of the Health Working Group as a key platform for advancing cooperation in public health.

She noted that the BRICS Health Working Group meetings in recent years have paved the way for collaboration on pressing health challenges, including communicable and non-communicable diseases, strengthening of health systems, and improving access to affordable medicines. These efforts have further strengthened cooperation in pandemic preparedness, health technology innovation, and the promotion of Universal Health Coverage.

Emphasising India's priorities under its 2026 Chairship, she stated that the Health Working Group aims to foster inclusive, sustainable, and evidence-driven health cooperation, while recognising the diverse health systems and socio-economic contexts of BRICS nations. She underlined the importance of adaptability, mutual learning, and leveraging collective expertise to design scalable and impactful health interventions.

The Secretary also highlighted that successive BRICS Health Ministers' Meetings and Declarations have consistently underscored the importance of sharing best practices, strengthening health infrastructure, and building resilient healthcare systems capable of responding effectively to public health emergencies. She further stressed the need for enhanced cooperation in joint research and development, equitable access to vaccines and medicines, and capacity-building initiatives.

While reaffirming commitment to existing priorities, the Union Health Secretary proposed two new priority areas under India's Chairship: BRICS Mission for Healthy Lifestyles, aimed at promoting healthy behaviours and addressing key risk factors such as unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, tobacco use, and harmful use of alcohol; and Promotion of Mental Health and Wellness, focusing on strengthening mental health services, addressing stigma, and integrating mental health into broader public health frameworks.

She also highlighted India's emphasis on evidence-based traditional medicine, rooted in biodiversity and indigenous knowledge systems, as a valuable contributor to Universal Health Coverage and sustainable development, and called for enhanced international cooperation in this domain.

Reiterating the importance of multilateralism and partnership, the Union Health Secretary expressed confidence that the deliberations under the Health Track would strengthen cooperation and deepen mutual understanding among BRICS nations. She encouraged all delegations to actively engage and contribute towards translating shared commitments into tangible outcomes for global health.

The meeting also deliberated on the nine priority areas identified under the BRICS Health Working Group, reflecting a comprehensive and collaborative approach to addressing public health challenges. These include: (i) BRICS TB Research Network; (ii) collaboration among BRICS Medical Products Regulatory Authorities; (iii) BRICS Integrated Early Warning System for prevention and response to mass infectious diseases; (iv) Digital Health Architecture for continuum of care, including specialised healthcare in remote areas; (v) BRICS Mission for Healthy Lifestyles; (vi) promotion of mental health and wellness; (vii) Traditional, Complementary and Integrative Medicine (TCIM); (viii) fight against diseases driven by social determinants of health (DDSDH); and (ix) BRICS Network of National Public Health Institutes.

These priority areas aim to strengthen cooperation in research, innovation, regulatory harmonisation, digital health, and equitable healthcare delivery, while reinforcing collective preparedness and resilience among BRICS nations.

Member countries welcomed India's leadership and the shared theme of building resilience through innovation, cooperation, and sustainability. Brazil, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, and Indonesia each expressed firm support for the new priorities of promoting healthy lifestyles and mental wellness, as well as for integrating traditional, complementary, and integrative medicine into health systems. They emphasised deepening collaboration on tuberculosis through the BRICS TB Research Network, strengthening the BRICS integrated early warning system for infectious diseases, enhancing digital health architectures to improve access (especially in remote and vulnerable communities), and advancing regulatory cooperation and local production of medicines and vaccines. Across statements, countries underlined universal health coverage, addressing socially determined diseases and broader social determinants of health, and ensuring fair access to health technologies as shared goals.

The meeting concluded with consensus on priority deliverables and a roadmap for subsequent engagements, including technical meetings and ministerial-level discussions under the BRICS Health Track 2026.

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare reiterated India's commitment to advancing the BRICS agenda and contributing meaningfully to global health security through partnership, innovation, and shared responsibility.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh Q
Good step, but I hope our own public health system gets strengthened with the learnings from this. We have brilliant schemes like Ayushman Bharat, but ground-level implementation in villages needs work. International cooperation should translate to better primary health centres here.
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Aman W
The emphasis on traditional medicine is key! Ayurveda and Yoga are our strengths and can offer sustainable solutions to the world. Glad to see it on the BRICS agenda. Let's hope for more research funding and global acceptance.
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Sarah B
As someone working in global health, this is promising. The integrated early warning system is crucial. The pandemic showed we were unprepared. If BRICS nations can build a robust, shared system, it will benefit the entire Global South. Kudos to the Indian team for steering this.
V
Vikram M
Digital health for remote areas is the need of the hour. India's experience with telemedicine during COVID can be a model for other BRICS countries. Hope the collaboration speeds up affordable medical tech for rural communities across all member nations.
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Karthik V
While the themes are excellent, execution is everything. The TB Research Network is vital for India. We need to ensure knowledge sharing leads to faster, cheaper diagnostics and treatments reaching patients. Less talk, more actionable deliverables, please.
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Nisha Z

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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