Himachal Pradesh’s Chief Minister has ordered the state health department to build a mobile app for online payment of medical tests in government hospitals plus doctor appointment booking aiming to make services smoother and cashless within one month.
Glimpse:
In a push for digital governance, Himachal Pradesh will soon offer an app that lets citizens pay for medical tests online, removing the need to wait in long queues at hospitals. The app will also enable booking appointments with doctors. The order comes from the state Chief Minister, who instructed the Health Department in coordination with the Department of Digital Technologies & Governance to develop the app within a month. The government says the new tool aligns with larger reforms in the health sector, including upgrading medical colleges and hospitals with modern equipment, so that patients need not travel outside the state for specialized care. The state has budgeted over ₹3,000 crore for broad health infrastructure improvements.
Himachal Pradesh is gearing up to make life easier for patients. Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu has directed the Health Department to build a dedicated mobile app and fast. The goal: within a month, citizens will be able to pay for diagnostic tests in government hospitals online, instead of standing in long, tedious queues.
The digital tool will also allow booking appointments with doctors across various state hospitals through the same app. Reducing physical friction is a big deal many patients lose half a day or more just waiting to pay or book services.
This initiative isn’t happening in isolation. It’s part of a wider health sector reform plan, which includes investing over ₹3,000 crore to modernize hospitals and medical colleges, and reduce the need for patients to travel out of state for specialized tests and treatments.
The app is to be developed jointly by the Health Department and the Department of Digital Technologies and Governance, reflecting an effort to integrate health services with state-level digital infrastructure. Once launched, it should bring smoother transactions, faster service delivery, and less crowding in hospital billing and diagnostic areas.
Of course, with ambitious timelines come challenges ensuring strong digital payment integration, making sure the app is user-friendly even for people in remote areas with poor internet connectivity, inclusion of multiple languages, and training hospital staff. Also, safety and privacy of health and payment data will be essential to earn trust.
If this rolls out well, Himachal could set a strong example of how digital health governance can improve everyday experiences not just for urban users, but for people living in far-off hill districts too.
“Our aim is simple no more long waits just to pay for tests. With this app, we want citizens to access healthcare with ease cashless, quicker, and without travel hassles,”
By
HB Team
