Our programs

REACH 2.0
Ongoing

Rural Effective Affordable and Comprehensive Health Care


REACH 2.0 is a three-year strategic plan by SHARE INDIA to expand comprehensive non-communicable disease screening across 24 villages in Medchal through a structured, sequential rollout.

LIFE
Ongoing

Longitudinal Indian Family hEalth


The Longitudinal Indian Family Health (LIFE) pilot study was established in 2009. The goal of this study is to understand the link between the environment in which Indian women conceive, pregnancy, and child birth, physical and mental health along with the development of the child.

DC-SURV
Ongoing

Community-based Surveillance to estimate incidence and Sero prevalence of acute febrile illness with focus on Dengue and Chikungunya


As part of the Clinical Trial Network established under the National Biopharma Mission through the Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council, ten demographic surveillance sites across India were selected to study the epidemiology of acute febrile illnesses, dengue, & chikungunya

STReTCH
Ongoing

Comprehensive Family-Based Screening, Management & Linkage Utilizing Molecular Diagnostics in a Rural, Underserved Community


STReTCH is a community- and family-based screening program in rural Telangana that integrates molecular diagnostics to identify and manage hypertension, diabetes, tuberculosis, and cervical cancer.

CATCH
Completed

Community Access To Cervical Health


SHARE INDIA jointly with Johns Hopkins University to evaluate various strategies in screening the population for Cervical Cancer. The project was initiated in 2002 and completed in 2009, under the guidance of Prof. Keerti Shah and implemented by his associate Dr. Patti Gravitt.

POP
Ongoing

Prosthetics & Orthotics for the Disabled Program


The Prosthetics & Orthotics for the Disabled Program (POP) is an innovation-led initiative focused on developing affordable, customized prosthetic and orthotic solutions in India. By integrating digital technologies with clinical expertise, POP aims to restore mobility, independence, and dignity for persons with limb loss.

AHP
Ongoing

Artificial Heart Program


Artificial Heart Program (AHP) is a flagship bio-engineering initiative by SHARE INDIA that brings together engineering institutes, medical institutions, and industry partners to advance the indigenous development of life-saving cardiac assist devices in India through collaborative, innovation-driven research.

CDC & PEPFAR
Ongoing

HIV, TB, Disease Surveillance & Laboratory Strengthening Technical Assistance


SHARE INDIA provides technical assistance under cooperative agreements supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) to strengthen India’s response to HIV and tuberculosis. Working in close collaboration with national and state health programs, our efforts span disease surveillance systems, laboratory strengthening, diagnostics, treatment optimization, and digital health platforms—advancing data-driven decision-making to accelerate epidemic control and TB elimination.

Global Fund
Ongoing

Strengthening India’s HIV Laboratory Network


Supported by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, SHARE INDIA is strengthening India’s national HIV laboratory systems under NACP by expanding drug resistance testing, improving quality standards, and advancing molecular surveillance. From establishing HIV-1 Drug Resistance laboratories and a national biorepository to scaling ISO 15189–aligned quality systems, this initiative enhances diagnostic accuracy, informs treatment decisions, and strengthens India’s capacity to detect and respond to emerging HIV threats.

MILES
Completed

Mobility and Independent Living in Elders Study


This longitudinal study, initiated in 2012, was designed to examine the burden of age-related chronic diseases and associated risk factors among older adults in rural India. The study was implemented in the Medchal region of Telangana, through collaboration between SHARE INDIA, MediCiti Institute of Medical Sciences

No results found