From Policy to Practice: Why India Needs a National AI Doctors Mission (NAIDM) Now
Written By : Prem Aggarwal
Published On 2026-05-25 05:45 GMT | Update On 2026-05-25 05:46 GMT
Artificial Intelligence is no longer a future concept in healthcare—it is already influencing diagnosis, clinical decision-making, hospital workflows, and public health systems. India, with its vast population, uneven distribution of medical resources, and expanding digital health infrastructure, stands at a defining moment. The policy momentum is encouraging. The proposed national framework for regulating AI in healthcare rightly identifies critical concerns—patient safety, data privacy, algorithmic bias, and accountability. It proposes a structured, risk-based approach, institutional oversight, and strong data governance.
This is necessary. But it is not sufficient. Because between policy and practice, there is a missing layer—the doctor.
No AI system, however advanced, can replace clinical judgment, ethical responsibility, and contextual decision-making. Even the policy framework reinforces that clinicians remain responsible for final clinical decisions. This is not a limitation of AI—it is a design principle. AI will not replace doctors. But doctors who understand AI will redefine healthcare.
India’s healthcare challenges are well known: high patient load, workforce shortages, variability in quality, and fragmented data systems. AI has the potential to address many of these gaps—improving efficiency, enhancing diagnostic accuracy, and enabling smarter resource utilization. However, technology alone does not create impact. Impact happens when the user understands the tool.
Today, the real challenge is not the absence of AI—but the absence of structured AI readiness among doctors. Without this, AI risks being underutilized, misused, or over-relied upon. A tool designed to improve care could unintentionally compromise it. The current policy framework focuses on validation, certification, surveillance, and accountability. But the critical question remains: who will operationalize this at the bedside?
The answer is simple—the doctor.
To bridge this gap, the National AI Doctors Mission (NAIDM) has been launched at Health AI Con 2026. NAIDM is built on a clear principle: AI in healthcare must be doctor-led, ethically guided, and clinically grounded. The mission aims to make every doctor in India AI-ready—not as a technologist, but as a responsible and informed user. This includes the ability to interpret AI outputs, understand limitations, identify bias, and integrate AI meaningfully into clinical workflows. Equally important, NAIDM reinforces that AI is an assistive tool—not a decision-maker. The authority and accountability of clinical decisions must remain with the doctor. The mission also focuses on practical integration—bringing AI into OPDs, diagnostics, ICUs, and hospital operations—where it can truly improve patient care. At the same time, it aligns with national priorities of safety, equity, transparency, and accountability.
India has a unique opportunity. With its scale, digital infrastructure under Ayushman Bharat, and strong medical workforce, the country can lead the world in responsible AI adoption. But without capacity building, AI may remain confined to select institutions and corporate settings. NAIDM seeks to democratize AI in healthcare—ensuring that it becomes a tool in the hands of every doctor, not just a technological advantage for a few.
This is not just about technology. This is about the future of medical practice. The National AI Doctors Mission was formally launched at Health AI Con 2026 on 17th May in New Delhi, bringing together clinicians, policymakers, educators, and innovators to shape this transition. The future of healthcare will not be written by algorithms alone. It will be written by doctors who understand them.
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