11 Years of Transforming Health Solutions

about jsi

JSIPL views technology as a significant game-changer in public health and invests in research,partnerships, and on-ground projects that strengthen healthcare delivery across national, state, and district levels.
Digital health has gained wider acceptance during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is now being leveraged to create new platforms for governments and healthcare partners to share intelligence and shape the country’s public health agenda.

Nature of interventions

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1

Anchoring coordination between government and different health partners.

2

Facilitating sharing, demonstrating, and documenting innovations and best practices for replication and scale-up.

3

Improving data collection and generating technology-backed evidence to inform policy decisions.

4

Strengthening disease surveillance to enhance safety and protection of public health beneficiaries.

Process

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Using technology to power and aid health interventions and to provide access in hard-to-reach geographies with ease of comfort to overburdened frontline health workers.

2

Creating learning systems that make training more straightforward and accessible to healthcare workers.

3

Designing effective behavior change communication strategies that micro-target beneficiaries.

4

Refining data collection systems offer real-time insights (for example, COVID-19 vaccinations) and provide valuable insights to reach vulnerable communities.

5

Building efficiencies across supply chains to enhance access and equity.

Striving for Better Health Outcomes

JSIPL provides an opportunity for piloting digital health projects, creating a rigorous quality testing process, and advocating with governments to adopt them at scale.

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1

The Building health Cities project uses tech-enabled coordination across sectors like transport, sanitation, education, and the environment to improve access to health services and reduce the disease burden.

2

COVID-19 vaccinations roll-out saw major innovations using digital health to saturate large populations and geographies in record time. War rooms were set up, telehealth initiatives received a boost, and the Co-WIN, Aarogya Setu app, and other m-health initiatives connected the entire country through single platforms to register for vaccination and record their status.

3

Rapid Immunization Skill Enhancement (RISE), a customized Learning Management System (LMS), offered health workers an interactive, self-learning, and self-paced platform using technology through a web/ mobile device. After a successful pilot launch, it was expanded to 33 districts to reach 40,000,000 people.

4

With technology-led supply chains, improving access to HIV services helped develop systems to collect data, build warehousing, logistics, and forecasting capacities, and reduce stock-outs.