Health Research Policy Latest News
- The Centre has released the Draft National Health Research Policy 2026, proposing a comprehensive overhaul of India’s health research ecosystem to align research more closely with the country’s disease burden and public health priorities.
About Health Research in India
- Health research in India is a broad field encompassing biomedical science, clinical medicine, public health, epidemiology, digital health, health systems, behavioural sciences, and emerging technologies. It plays a critical role in:
- Understanding disease patterns and burden
- Developing vaccines, diagnostics, and medicines
- Informing evidence-based policymaking
- Improving healthcare delivery
- Preparing for public health emergencies
Key Institutions
- India has built considerable scientific capability through institutions such as:
- Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)
- Department of Health Research (DHR)
- All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and other premier institutions
- National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), Hyderabad
Existing Framework
- The current National Health Research Policy was introduced in 2011. The new draft policy aims to update this framework to address emerging challenges and align with India’s growing ambitions in health research.
- Low Public Investment
- India currently spends only 0.024% of GDP on health research.
- This is significantly below the weighted average of 0.27% of GDP invested by high-income countries (as reported by WHO).
- Uneven Research Capacity
- Research capacity is concentrated in a handful of institutions and states.
- Wide regional disparities exist in research infrastructure and capabilities.
- Many medical colleges have limited research output.
- Fragmented Research Efforts
- Duplication of research by different agencies.
- Lack of coordination between academia, hospitals, industry, and government.
- Absence of a unified national framework.
- Priorities Not Aligned with Disease Burden
- Research priorities do not always match India’s real disease burden.
- Insufficient focus on equity concerns and health system gaps.
- Inadequate preparation for future public health emergencies.
- Slow Translation of Research
- Scientific findings often do not translate into healthcare delivery.
- Administrative and regulatory delays slow down research.
- Weak links between research outcomes and policy implementation.
- Limited Cross-Sector Collaboration
- Weak collaboration between academia, hospitals, industry, and government.
- Limited participation of the private sector in health research.
- Insufficient community engagement in research priorities.
News Summary: Draft National Health Research Policy 2026
- The Department of Health Research has released the Draft National Health Research Policy 2026, which represents the first attempt at a unified national framework spanning all areas of health research.
- The policy has been opened for public comments until 27 July, after which it will be finalised.
- The draft policy aims to:
- Align scientific research more closely with disease burden and public health priorities
- Promote indigenous innovation
- Enable evidence-based policymaking
- Ensure measurable outcomes
- Address fragmentation and regional disparities
- Speed up translation of research into healthcare and policy
Key Proposals of the Draft Policy
- Massive Increase in Research Funding
- The draft proposes a six-fold increase in government spending on health research:
- Current: 0.024% of GDP
- By 2037: 0.072% of GDP
- By 2047: 0.15% of GDP
- While this would bring India closer to high-income countries’ investment levels, it would still remain below their current weighted average of 0.27%.
- National Health Research Agenda
- A National Health Research Agenda will be created to identify priority research areas based on:
- Disease burden in India
- Emerging health threats
- Health system needs
- National priorities
- Equity and pandemic preparedness
- Strategic national interest
- A National Health Research Agenda will be created to identify priority research areas based on:
- Priority Research Areas
- The draft identifies key priority areas including: Tuberculosis, Antimicrobial resistance (AMR), Vector-borne diseases, Cancer, Non-communicable diseases (NCDs), Mental health, Anaemia, Child malnutrition, Women’s health, Maternal and neonatal mortality, Primary healthcare and Emergency care
- Three-Tier Governance Structure
- The draft proposes a comprehensive three-tier governance structure:
- National Health Research Stewardship Committee – for overall strategic coordination.
- Department of Health Research – as the nodal implementing agency.
- Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) – as the scientific and technical lead.
- States will be expected to weave research more tightly into local health programmes and service delivery.
- New Evaluation Framework for Scientists
- A significant shift is proposed in how researchers are evaluated:
- Moving from counting research papers and grants to assessing real-world impact.
- Expanded use of the ICMR Impact of Research and Innovation Scale (ICMR-IRIS) introduced in 2025.
- As the draft states: “It is not enough to count studies completed, papers published, grants awarded, or technologies developed. The deeper test is whether research strengthens scientific capability, informs policy and practice, builds institutions and people, reaches underserved populations, improves health systems, and contributes to better health for India and the world.”
- Simplified Ethics and Regulatory Framework
- Simplified ethics approvals for multicentre studies.
- Establishment of a National Research Integrity Office (NRIO).
- Responsible use of artificial intelligence in health research.
- Expanded shared access to laboratories, biobanks, and other publicly funded research facilities.
- Bigger Role for States and Private Sector
- The policy seeks to expand health research beyond a few leading institutions by:
- Strengthening research capacity in medical colleges.
- Encouraging greater participation from private hospitals, startups, and industry.
- Improving collaboration between researchers, policymakers, and healthcare providers.
- Requiring states to prepare their own health research agendas based on local disease patterns.
- Calling for greater investment from industry, philanthropic organisations, and CSR initiatives.
Expert Views
- According to experts in global health and bioethics, the draft is a step towards making health research more responsive to the country’s needs:
- The draft covers the entire research pathway from identifying priorities to generating evidence, innovation, implementation, and measuring real-world impact.
- It places ethical and scientific integrity, community participation, and accountability at the centre.
- The proposal to expand research beyond a few institutions and involve states in setting priorities is welcome.
- However, the policy’s goals will require sustained investment and effective implementation.
- It should help address challenges such as inadequate research infrastructure, research misconduct, delays in fellowship payments to research scholars, and timely implementation.
Last updated on July, 2026
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Health Research Policy FAQs
Q1. Which department released the Draft National Health Research Policy 2026?+
Q2. What is India's current spending on health research as a percentage of GDP?+
Q3. What are the target spending levels proposed by the draft policy?+
Q4. What is the three-tier governance structure proposed in the policy?+
Q5. What is the ICMR Impact of Research and Innovation Scale (ICMR-IRIS)?+
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