NATHEALTH to organize 12th Annual Arogya Bharat Summit on March 24–25, 2026 in Delhi

Senior officials from the Ministry of Health, Department of Pharmaceuticals, NITI Aayog, and the National Health Authority will also be joining the sector leaders to forge a shared agenda

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New Delhi: On March 24–25, 2026, NATHEALTH is set to host its 12th Annual Arogya Bharat Summit in New Delhi, bringing together CXOs, policymakers, clinicians, and global health innovators under the theme “Catalysing Value, Stimulating Innovation, and Strengthening Healthcare Service Delivery.”
Senior officials from the Ministry of Health, Department of Pharmaceuticals, NITI Aayog, and the National Health Authority will also be joining the sector leaders to forge a shared agenda.
The summit’s agenda addresses India’s most urgent health priorities: the need to scale Allied Healthcare Professionals; healthcare deregulation and structural reform to unlock private capital; AI and digital health at population scale; provider–MedTech convergence; sustainable models for financing access and affordability; and the road ahead for India’s digital health infrastructure. Every session is anchored in a single question: what must the ecosystem do differently together to better serve the Indian patient?
““We are at an inflection point for Indian healthcare. The focus now is on how the private sector and government can align more effectively to serve patients and prioritise patient safety. Viksit Bharat 2047 must be built on the foundation of a healthier India, and the Arogya Bharat Summit serves as a platform to align stakeholders and drive actionable solutions towards that vision,” said Ameera Shah, President, NATHEALTH, Executive Chairperson, Metropolis Healthcare.
India is at a defining moment in its healthcare journey. Private capital flowing into the sector has seen 25% surged from reaching a record 5.5 billion USD in 2023. The digital health market is on course to grow fivefold to USD 47.8 billion by 2033. And with Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY, the world’s largest public health protection scheme, India has demonstrated the scale of ambition it brings to healthcare. The foundations of a truly healthy nation are being laid. And yet, the work of closing the gap between quality access and growing disease burden, between innovation and need for bridging equity gaps, between aspiration and scaling trajectory, demands more momentum. It demands true partnership and convergence in design and implementation from the lens of patient.