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The Government of India has announced that a total of 50,373 public health facilities across all states and Union Territories in the country have been certified under the National Quality Assurance Standards (NQAS) – a comprehensive quality framework established by the ministry of health and family welfare (MoHFW) - as on December 31, 2025.
This achievement reinforces the government’s commitment to quality, safety, and patient-centred care and represents a significant step forward in ensuring equitable access to high-quality healthcare for all citizens, particularly the poor, vulnerable, and marginalised populations, said the Union ministry of health and family welfare.
The NQAS journey began in 2015 with just 10 certified healthcare facilities, initially focusing on district hospitals to ensure safe, patient-centric, and quality-assured services. Over time, the framework was systematically expanded to sub-district hospitals, community health centres, Ayushman Arogya Mandir–PHCs, AAM–UPHCs, and AAM–Sub Health Centres, enabling quality assurance across all levels of public healthcare.
The introduction of Virtual Assessments for NQAS certification has rapidly expanded quality coverage across India’s public health system. Certified facilities increased from 6,506 in December 2023 to 22,786 in December 2024, and further to 50,373 by December 2025—reflecting an exponential scale-up within one year. This includes 48,663 Ayushman Arogya Mandirs (SHC, PHC, UPHC) and 1,710 secondary care facilities (CHC, SDH, DH), underscoring the institutionalisation of quality across all levels of public healthcare.
India’s pursuit of Universal Health Coverage (UHC), guided by the National Health Policy 2017, emphasises the provision of quality, affordable healthcare without financial hardship, said the Ministry. The rapid scale-up of NQAS reflects the adoption of multi-pronged acceleration strategies, including continuous capacity building, digital innovations, substantial increase in pool of assessors, and continuous quality improvement mechanisms.
Crossing 50,000 NQAS certification is a testament to India’s collective resolve to build a resilient, self-reliant, and high-quality public health system. This achievement embodies the spirit of Aatmanirbhar Bharat and the guiding principles of “Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas, Sabka Vishwas, Sabka Prayaas”, reaffirming that quality healthcare is central to India’s development.
It added that the Government of India remains committed to sustaining and further expanding NQAS certification, ensuring that quality becomes an intrinsic and enduring attribute of public healthcare delivery across the country. In this direction, the nation has set an interim goal of achieving NQAS certification for at least 50% of public healthcare facilities by March 2026, further reinforcing its resolve to institutionalise quality, safety, and patient-centred care at scale.
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