A Global Lifeline: From the Highways of Nepal to the World
The scene is tragically universal. A violent crash. Then, silence. Not the silence of peace, but a void filled with chaos, delay, and systemic failure. Whether on a mountain road in Nepal, a freeway in the United States, or an autobahn in Germany, the story is the same:
There is a silence that is the same in every language. The quiet, creeping silence of a child’s malnutrition in a forgotten corner of any nation.
The names of the countries change. But the large silence when a life hangs in the balance is terrifyingly the same.
I am Anshu Adhikari, a Community Health Worker from Nepal. I know this silence from my home. I have seen it on our mountain roads, and I have felt it in villages where our heroic Female Community Health Volunteers (FCHVs) give their unconditional support, only to be left helpless. I have held the hands of mothers in that silence and seen the desperation in the eyes of our volunteers. It was from that helplessness that the determination to build a solution was forged.
I realized this is not just Nepal’s problem. It is a universal design flaw in how we respond to crisis and deliver care. That is why the solutions we are building, born from the urgent needs of Nepal, are designed for the world.
We are shattering the silence with two distinct platforms:
First, for the universal moment of violent, unexpected crisis, we created e.health. It is a digital first responder that automatically detects a crash, broadcasting an instant, data-rich alert—with GPS coordinates and the victim’s vital medical profile—to emergency services. It closes the fatal gap between impact and informed response, turning chaos into a managed, life-saving operation.
Second, to fight the quiet, preventable crises happening everywhere, we created Sahayatri (“Fellow Traveler”). It is the digital toolkit for the heroes on the front lines of community health. It transforms ANC visits into proactive monitoring, provides early warnings for malnutrition, and, most critically, connects isolated community workers to a network of expert guidance.
e.health is our answer to the sudden emergency. Sahayatri is our foundation for a resilient, healthier future. Together, they form a new nervous system for global health—one that is immediate, intelligent, and equitable.
We are now building the partnerships to deploy this system in Nepal, creating a model ready for the world.
We are building this because no one—regardless of their passport or postcode—should die waiting for help that technology can deliver. Our mission is to make emergency response instantaneous and preventive care a universal reality.
Let’s build a world where the silence is finally broken.
How med-tech Will Work
- Smart Emergency Response:
• Precise GPS location
• Blood type and allergies
• Live video for remote triage - Maternal Health Guardian: Will provide:
• Pregnancy risk assessments
• Clinic appointment reminders
• Emergency transport coordination - Child Nutrition Watch: Will feature:
• AI-assisted malnutrition screening
• Customized feeding plans
• Vaccine tracking
Expected Impact
Projected outcomes based on prototype testing:
✓ 50% faster emergency response times
✓ 40% reduction in preventable maternal complications
✓ 60% improvement in early malnutrition detection
Development Timeline
🗓 Phase 1 (2025): Finalize prototype
🗓 Phase 2 (2026): Pilot in 3 districts (Kathmandu, Pokhara, rural site)
🗓 Phase 3 (2026): Nationwide rollout with government partnership
Founder’s Vision
“We’re building med-tech because no one should die waiting for help that technology can deliver,” said [Anshu Adhikari], a community health worker & founder. “Our goal is to make emergency care instantaneous and preventive care accessible to all people’s, regardless of location.”
For more information about Med-tech development and Research: contact anshuadhikari@gmail.com