PIB Summaries 05 May 2026

  1. Medical and Wellness Tourism in India
  2. BRO’s Project Deepak celebrates its 66th Raising Day


  • India is rapidly emerging as a global hub for Medical Value Travel (MVT), driven by initiatives like Heal in India, AYUSH Visa, and Regional Medical Hubs (Budget 2026–27), alongside rising global demand for affordable, high-quality, and holistic healthcare solutions.

Relevance

  • GS II (Governance / Health / IR)
    • Health diplomacy; India as global healthcare provider
    • Policy initiatives: Heal in India, AYUSH integration, medical visas
  • GS III (Economy)
    • Services exports; tourism-led growth
    • Healthcare economy and employment generation
  • GS I (Society)
    • Traditional knowledge systems (AYUSH), wellness culture

Practice Question  

Q. Medical and Wellness Tourism has emerged as a strategic sector combining healthcare, economy, and soft power.Analyse its growth drivers, economic potential, and challenges in India. (250 words)

  • Medical Value Travel (MVT) refers to cross-border movement of patients combining curative medical tourism (surgeries, diagnostics) with wellness tourism (AYUSH therapies), creating a dual healthcare model integrating modern medicine with traditional healing systems.
  • India’s legacy of Ayurveda, Yoga, Naturopathy complements modern tertiary care, forming a holistic healthcare ecosystem that addresses both treatment and preventive well-being, enhancing India’s global healthcare attractiveness.
  • Institutional coordination is ensured by the National Medical & Wellness Tourism Promotion Board, which integrates ministries, states, hospitals, and private stakeholders to promote India as a global healthcare destination.
  • The global MVT market is valued at USD 115.6 billion (2022) and projected to reach USD 286.1 billion by 2030 (CAGR ~10.8%), reflecting a structural shift towards cross-border healthcare demand.
  • India’s MVT market is estimated at USD 8.7 billion (2025) and projected to reach USD 16.2 billion by 2030, indicating rapid growth supported by policy push and infrastructure expansion.
  • India ranks 10th globally (Medical Tourism Index) and 5th in Asia-Pacific wellness tourism, highlighting its strong positioning in both curative and preventive healthcare segments.
  • In 2025, about 5.07 lakh medical tourists visited India, contributing nearly 5.5% of total Foreign Tourist Arrivals (FTAs), underlining healthcare tourism’s rising economic significance.
Global Push Factors
  • Rising healthcare costs, long waiting periods, and insurance constraints in developed countries are pushing patients to seek cost-effective and timely treatment abroad, benefiting India’s MVT sector.
  • Increasing burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and lifestyle disorders globally is boosting demand for advanced treatment and preventive wellness solutions, strengthening India’s dual healthcare advantage.
India’s Pull Factors
  • India offers 60–80% lower treatment costs compared to developed countries while maintaining comparable clinical standards and advanced technologies, making it a cost-effective healthcare destination.
  • Availability of 1.2 million doctors and over 69,000 hospitals, along with English-language proficiency, ensures quality care, accessibility, and seamless communication for international patients.
Medical Tourism (Curative Care)
  • India provides advanced tertiary care in cardiac surgery, oncology, organ transplantation, orthopaedics, fertility treatments, supported by NABH/JCI-accredited hospitals ensuring global standards.
  • Major healthcare hubs such as Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad, Bengaluru serve as centres for specialised treatment, high-end infrastructure, and international patient inflow.
Wellness Tourism (Preventive Care)
  • AYUSH systems (Ayurveda, Yoga, Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha, Homeopathy) provide holistic and preventive care, catering to global demand for lifestyle and mental wellness.
  • Yoga as soft power strengthens India’s image as a global wellness destination, attracting international tourists seeking integrated mind-body healing experiences.
  • AYUSH Visa (2023) provides a dedicated entry mechanism for foreign patients seeking traditional therapies, boosting wellness tourism inflow and accessibility.
  • Union Budget 2026–27 proposes 5 Regional Medical Hubs, integrating treatment, research, education, and wellness services, enhancing India’s global healthcare competitiveness.
  • Accreditation frameworks like NABH (1,299+ hospitals) and JCI ensure patient safety, quality assurance, and international credibility of India’s healthcare institutions.
  • Digital initiatives such as e-Medical Visa (172 countries) and MVT Portal provide end-to-end facilitation, including planning, booking, payments, and post-treatment care.
  • The tourism sector contributes 5.22% to GDP and supports 8.46 crore jobs (13.3% employment), with MVT emerging as a high-value foreign exchange earning segment.
  • Medical tourism generates multiplier effects across sectors like hospitality, pharmaceuticals, diagnostics, and transport, boosting overall economic growth and regional development.
  • Increasing inflow of medical tourists enhances India’s services exports and global competitiveness, contributing to economic diversification and resilience.
  • India strengthens its health diplomacy by providing affordable healthcare to patients from South Asia, Africa, and Central Asia, enhancing global goodwill and cooperation.
  • Integration of AYUSH and modern medicine reinforces India’s cultural diplomacy and soft power, projecting it as a leader in holistic healthcare systems.
  • India contributes to global public health equity by expanding access to affordable treatments, especially for patients from developing countries.
  • Regional disparities in healthcare quality, with world-class facilities concentrated in urban centres, limit uniform access and affect India’s global healthcare reputation.
  • Ethical concerns including organ transplant tourism, regulatory gaps, and patient safety issues require stronger governance frameworks and oversight mechanisms.
  • Infrastructure bottlenecks such as connectivity issues, language barriers, and weak post-treatment follow-up systems reduce patient experience and continuity of care.
  • Increasing competition from countries like Thailand, Singapore, and Turkey with aggressive pricing and marketing strategies challenges India’s global market share.
  • Expand accreditation and regulatory oversight to ensure uniform quality standards across healthcare institutions and strengthen international trust.
  • Develop integrated healthcare clusters combining treatment, wellness, rehabilitation, and hospitality to provide end-to-end patient experience.
  • Strengthen digital health ecosystems (telemedicine, follow-up care) to ensure continuity and improve patient satisfaction globally.
  • Promote Heal in India” branding through global partnerships, diplomacy, and targeted outreach to position India as a premier healthcare destination.
  • Invest in skilling healthcare workforce in language, hospitality, and cultural sensitivity to enhance patient experience and service quality.
  • AYUSH Visa (2023) – dedicated visa for wellness tourism.
  • NABH & JCI – key accreditation bodies for healthcare quality.
  • Medical Value Travel (MVT) – includes both medical + wellness tourism.
Intro Options
  • “India’s Medical Value Travel sector represents a strategic convergence of healthcare, tourism, and soft power diplomacy.”
  • “The rise of Medical Value Travel highlights India’s transition into a global hub for affordable and holistic healthcare.”
Conclusion Frameworks
  • “Sustainable growth in MVT requires balancing affordability, quality, and robust regulation.”
  • “By integrating modern medicine with traditional wisdom, India can emerge as the global epicentre of holistic healthcare.”


  • Project Deepak of the Border Roads Organisation celebrated its 66th Raising Day (May 4, 2026), highlighting its long-standing contribution to strategic border connectivity, defence preparedness, and disaster response in the Western Himalayas.

Relevance

  • GS Paper III (Security / Infrastructure)
    • Border infrastructure and defence preparedness
    • Strategic connectivity in Himalayan regions
  • GS Paper III (Disaster Management)
    • Role of infrastructure agencies in disaster response in high-altitude areas

Practice Question

Q. Border infrastructure plays a critical role in national security and regional development.Examine the significance of BROs Project Deepak in strengthening Indias strategic and developmental objectives. (250 words)

  • Project Deepak, raised in 1961, is one of the oldest projects of BRO, responsible for infrastructure development in Western Himalayan regions, particularly in high-altitude and strategically sensitive border areas.
  • It operates in key districts of Himachal Pradesh including Shimla, Kinnaur, Kullu, and Lahaul-Spiti, regions critical for Indias border management and connectivity with Ladakh sector.
  • The project maintains over 1,100 km of road network, including high-altitude passes and border roads, ensuring all-weather connectivity and logistical support to armed forces.
  • Project Deepak plays a vital role in strengthening border infrastructure, ensuring rapid troop mobilisation, equipment movement, and operational readiness in sensitive sectors adjoining China (LAC).
  • Construction and maintenance of key corridors like Manali–Leh axis enhance strategic depth and redundancy, reducing dependence on vulnerable routes and improving military logistics resilience.
  • Infrastructure development in remote areas supports dual-use objectives, benefiting both civilian populations and defence forces, thereby integrating border areas into national security architecture.
  • Development of the historic Hindustan–Tibet Road has ensured connectivity to remote Himalayan regions, facilitating trade, tourism, and strategic movement along the Indo-Tibet border areas.
  • Continuous upgrading of high-altitude roads and passes ensures year-round connectivity, critical for maintaining supply chains to forward posts and reducing seasonal isolation.
  • Contribution to Manali–Leh highway infrastructure has significantly improved access to Ladakh, enhancing civil-military coordination and regional development.
  • Project Deepak contributes to regional socio-economic development by connecting remote tribal areas, improving access to healthcare, education, and markets, thereby reducing regional disparities.
  • Infrastructure development aligns with national initiatives like border area development programmes, promoting inclusive growth and strategic integration of frontier regions.
  • BRO’s Project Deepak has demonstrated strong capability in disaster response and rescue operations, especially in high-altitude and extreme weather conditions.
  • In May 2023, teams rescued around 300 stranded motorists at Baralachala Pass, showcasing operational readiness in challenging terrains.
  • In July 2023, over 250 civilians were evacuated from Chandrataal, highlighting the organisation’s role in humanitarian assistance and crisis response.
  • Harsh terrain, extreme weather, avalanches, and landslides significantly increase construction and maintenance costs and slow infrastructure development timelines.
  • Environmental concerns including fragile Himalayan ecology and climate change impacts complicate infrastructure expansion and require sustainable engineering practices.
  • Strategic competition along borders necessitates faster infrastructure development, posing challenges in balancing speed with environmental and safety standards.
  • Adopt advanced construction technologies (tunnel engineering, geospatial mapping) to overcome terrain challenges and ensure faster project execution in high-altitude areas.
  • Strengthen climate-resilient infrastructure planning to mitigate risks from landslides, glacial melt, and extreme weather events in Himalayan regions.
  • Enhance civil-military coordination and integrate infrastructure planning with national security strategies to optimise resource utilisation.
  • Promote sustainable infrastructure practices to balance ecological preservation with strategic development in fragile mountain ecosystems.
  • Project Deepak: One of the oldest projects of BRO (established 1961).
  • Operates in Western Himalayas (Himachal Pradesh).
  • Maintains ~1,100 km of strategic road network.
Intro Options
  • “Border infrastructure is a critical pillar of national security, with organisations like BRO playing a decisive role in strengthening India’s frontier resilience.”
  • “Strategic connectivity in the Himalayas has emerged as a key determinant of India’s defence preparedness and regional development.”
Conclusion Frameworks
  • “Strengthening border infrastructure requires balancing strategic imperatives with environmental sustainability.”
  • “Efficient and resilient infrastructure in border areas is essential for ensuring national security, regional integration, and disaster preparedness.”

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