The COVID-19 pandemic exposed critical vulnerabilities in traditional healthcare systems worldwide while demonstrating the transformative potential of digital health infrastructure. This paper presents a comprehensive technical analysis of India's Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM), examining its federated architecture, interoperability standards, and implementation outcomes. As of August 2025, ABDM encompasses 799. 1 million unique Ayushman Bharat Health Accounts (ABHA), 418, 964 registered health facilities, 679, 692 healthcare professionals, and 671. 9 million linked health records, representing one of the world's largest health data interoperability initiatives. The system employs HL7 FHIR R4 (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) standards, implements consent-based data sharing under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023, and operates on a five-year budget allocation of ₹1, 600 crore (approximately 192 million). Our analysis evaluates ABDM's technical architecture across multiple dimensions: federated data storage preventing centralization while enabling interoperability, RESTful API-based FHIR implementation supporting standards-compliant health information exchange, blockchain-based consent management ensuring auditability and privacy, and offline-capable mobile applications addressing connectivity constraints in rural areas. We present quantitative assessment of stakeholder impact, including 30-40% reduction in diagnostic redundancy, 2-3 week improvement in outbreak detection through syndromic surveillance, and projected 15-25% fraud reduction in insurance claims processing. Implementation challenges are critically examined, including geographic disparities in adoption rates (65% government facilities vs. 35% private hospitals), digital literacy barriers among elderly populations, and infrastructure gaps in remote regions. The research contributes empirical evidence for federated health data architecture feasibility in low- and middle-income countries, validates HL7 FHIR R4 adoption at national scale, and provides replicable framework for digital health transformation in resource-constrained settings.
Rahul Prabhudesai (Tue,) studied this question.