• CONTRAST:
Learnroll Pitches Arogya Nari at FTR4H New Delhi 2025 158 0

Learnroll Pitches Arogya Nari at FTR4H New Delhi 2025

Putting culturally tuned digital health—and women—at the center of India’s care revolution

Learnroll Admin
/ Categories: Technology, Event, Health

Why India’s women need a new care model—now

  • Silent epidemic: Heart disease is already the leading cause of death among Indian women, accounting for nearly 18 % of all female deaths.  Source - IHME
  • Low adherence barrier: Long‑term therapy adherence in India averages just 16.6 %–24.1 %, less than half the rate seen in high‑income countries.  Source   PMC

Together, these figures reveal an urgent need for locally relevant education, behaviour change support and continuous follow‑up—especially outside hospital walls.

Meet Arogya Nari: India’s culturally contextual health ally

Arogya Nari merges micro‑learning, conversational AI and incentive design to close critical gaps in women’s chronic‑disease journeys:

Core Pillar

What visitors experienced at FTR4H

Multilingual micro‑learning

Adherence

Bite‑sized modules (English, Hindi, Bengali, Kannada) with 3D visuals and printed handouts with QR codes(videos)

Start with education and integrate to activity based adherence plan that provide incentives for completion.

Saheli™ AI assistant

A calm, South‑Asian‑voiced guide that delivers voice or text Q&A, personalized knowledge assistance at point‑of‑care training for care workforce—even on low‑bandwidth devices.

Incentive engine

Badges and micro‑rewards that motivate both frontline nurses and patients to complete training and adhere to therapy.

Offline‑first architecture

Deployable in urban clinics, rural PHCs or community health worker tablets—synchronizing data when connectivity returns.

Join the movementLearnroll is onboarding pilot partners for  beginning Q3 2025. If you’re ready to co‑design a scalable program that meets India’s value‑based�

Learnroll Pitches Arogya Nari at FTR4H New Delhi 2025
  • CONTRAST:
Learnroll Pitches Arogya Nari at FTR4H New Delhi 2025 158 0

Learnroll Pitches Arogya Nari at FTR4H New Delhi 2025

Putting culturally tuned digital health—and women—at the center of India’s care revolution

Learnroll Admin
/ Categories: Technology, Event, Health

Why India’s women need a new care model—now

  • Silent epidemic: Heart disease is already the leading cause of death among Indian women, accounting for nearly 18 % of all female deaths.  Source - IHME
  • Low adherence barrier: Long‑term therapy adherence in India averages just 16.6 %–24.1 %, less than half the rate seen in high‑income countries.  Source   PMC

Together, these figures reveal an urgent need for locally relevant education, behaviour change support and continuous follow‑up—especially outside hospital walls.

Meet Arogya Nari: India’s culturally contextual health ally

Arogya Nari merges micro‑learning, conversational AI and incentive design to close critical gaps in women’s chronic‑disease journeys:

Core Pillar

What visitors experienced at FTR4H

Multilingual micro‑learning

Adherence

Bite‑sized modules (English, Hindi, Bengali, Kannada) with 3D visuals and printed handouts with QR codes(videos)

Start with education and integrate to activity based adherence plan that provide incentives for completion.

Saheli™ AI assistant

A calm, South‑Asian‑voiced guide that delivers voice or text Q&A, personalized knowledge assistance at point‑of‑care training for care workforce—even on low‑bandwidth devices.

Incentive engine

Badges and micro‑rewards that motivate both frontline nurses and patients to complete training and adhere to therapy.

Offline‑first architecture

Deployable in urban clinics, rural PHCs or community health worker tablets—synchronizing data when connectivity returns.

Join the movementLearnroll is onboarding pilot partners for  beginning Q3 2025. If you’re ready to co‑design a scalable program that meets India’s value‑based��care ambitions—while empowering every “sister in health”—info@learnroll.com.


Together, let’s script a new chapter where no Indian woman falls through the cracks of chronic‑disease management—because knowledge, culturally spoken, is the best medicine.

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