Key Points
- Swasth Bharat Portal integrates multiple health programme systems through API-based architecture
- Platform eliminates duplicate data entry across programmes for frontline health workers
- Government projects 20 to 30 per cent reduction in infrastructure costs
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has launched the Swasth Bharat Portal, a single platform designed to integrate India‘s fragmented digital health systems and reduce the administrative burden on frontline healthcare workers.
Union Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda unveiled the portal at the 10th National Summit on Innovation and Inclusivity in New Delhi. The government said the platform will connect existing health programme applications through APIs — standardised rules that allow different software systems to share data with each other — creating what officials described as a unified digital layer across programmes.
India’s public health infrastructure currently runs on multiple standalone applications developed under different national health programmes. These systems have enabled digital data collection at scale but operate independently, leading to duplicate data entry, fragmented records and inefficient use of resources, according to the ministry.
Frontline health workers including ASHAs (accredited social health activists), ANMs (auxiliary nurse midwives), CHOs (community health officers) and medical officers currently navigate multiple applications for programme reporting. The Swasth Bharat Portal aims to provide a single login and interface, eliminating repetitive data entry across systems.
The portal includes data visualisation tools intended to support monitoring and evidence-based planning at the local level, the ministry said.
Integration with National Health Registries
The platform is compliant with Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) standards and supports integration with ABHA — the Ayushman Bharat Health Account that serves as a unique health identifier for citizens. This integration enables secure exchange of patient health records across providers.
The government said the portal is designed to eventually connect with national registries including the Healthcare Professionals Registry and Health Facility Registry, creating what officials called a comprehensive and interoperable digital health ecosystem.
According to the ministry, the unified system is expected to deliver substantial savings in human resources, time and IT infrastructure compared to the current arrangement of separate portals managed by different programme divisions.
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The government projected a 20 to 30 per cent reduction in infrastructure costs by consolidating hosting, storage and computing resources that are currently maintained independently across programmes. It also estimated a 20 to 40 per cent reduction in data entry duplication and related staffing requirements.
The portal uses a federated architecture — a design approach where individual systems retain their data locally while connecting through a common interface — which the ministry said will enable higher interoperability between programmes without requiring a complete overhaul of existing systems.
Your Questions, Answered
What is the Swasth Bharat Portal?
The Swasth Bharat Portal is a government platform that integrates multiple national health programme applications through APIs, providing frontline health workers with a single interface for data entry and reporting.
How does the portal connect with Ayushman Bharat?
The portal is ABDM-compliant and supports integration with ABHA, the Ayushman Bharat Health Account. This enables secure exchange of patient health records across healthcare providers.
What savings does the government expect from the portal?
The ministry projects a 20 to 30 per cent reduction in infrastructure costs and a 20 to 40 per cent reduction in data entry duplication by consolidating resources currently maintained separately across programmes.
Which health workers will use the Swasth Bharat Portal?
The portal is designed for frontline health workers including ASHAs, ANMs, CHOs and medical officers who currently navigate multiple applications for programme reporting.







