Aster Volunteers, the corporate social responsibility arm of Aster DM Healthcare, has added two new state of the art mobile medical units in South India, increasing its global fleet to 71 vehicles. The expansion strengthens free primary healthcare outreach to underserved communities in Kerala and Karnataka, providing on site consultations, diagnostics, medicines, and health education to thousands of beneficiaries monthly particularly in rural and semi-urban areas with limited access to medical facilities.
Glimpse:
The two new mobile medical units, launched on January 25, 2026, are equipped with basic diagnostic tools, pharmacy dispensing, teleconsultation capabilities, and multilingual support to serve remote villages, tribal settlements, and low-income urban pockets. Each unit conducts 150–200 consultations per day, focusing on NCD screening (diabetes, hypertension), maternal/child health, eye/ENT checks, and general medicine. The addition aligns with Aster Volunteers’ goal of delivering 1 million free consultations annually and supports India’s preventive healthcare priorities under Ayushman Bharat and National Health Mission.
Aster Volunteers, the philanthropic initiative of Aster DM Healthcare, has expanded its mobile healthcare outreach in South India with the induction of two advanced mobile medical units one in Kerala and one in Karnataka bringing the organisation’s global fleet to 71 vehicles. The announcement, made on January 25, 2026, reflects Aster’s continued commitment to bridging healthcare access gaps in underserved communities through free, high-quality primary care services delivered directly to people’s doorsteps.
The new units are fully equipped with essential diagnostic capabilities, including digital BP monitors, glucometers, pulse oximeters, basic lab testing kits, ECG machines, and portable ultrasound where required. Each vehicle also features teleconsultation setups for specialist referrals, a small pharmacy stocked with commonly needed medicines, and multilingual staff (Malayalam, Kannada, Tamil, Hindi, English) to ensure effective communication in diverse communities.
The Kerala unit will primarily serve rural panchayats and coastal villages in districts such as Alappuzha, Kollam, and Pathanamthitta, while the Karnataka unit targets semi-urban and rural clusters around Bengaluru and Mysuru. Both units operate 5–6 days a week, conducting 150–200 daily consultations focused on:
- Non-communicable disease screening (diabetes, hypertension, obesity)
- Maternal and child health check-ups (antenatal care, immunisation awareness)
- General medicine consultations for fever, respiratory infections, skin conditions
- Basic eye and ENT screening with referral linkages
- Health education on nutrition, hygiene, and preventive care
The tools have been culturally and linguistically adapted for Indian populations, with validation studies already underway to confirm performance across diverse socioeconomic and educational backgrounds. Early pilot data from similar low resource settings has shown high acceptability, completion rates above 90%, and strong correlation with gold standard neuropsychological testing.
Dr. Kiri Granger, Chief Scientific Officer at Cambridge Cognition, said: “India faces one of the fastest growing dementia burdens globally, yet early detection remains limited outside major cities. By partnering with Ivory Health, we can bring scientifically validated, scalable cognitive screening to the point of care empowering primary physicians and community health workers to identify at risk individuals much earlier.”
Aster Volunteers reports that its mobile units collectively serve over 1 lakh beneficiaries annually across India, UAE, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and other countries where Aster operates. The new additions are expected to increase this impact significantly, particularly in South India where NCD prevalence is rising rapidly and public health facilities remain overstretched.
Dr. Azad Moopen, Founder Chairman & Managing Director of Aster DM Healthcare, said: “Our mobile medical units are a lifeline for communities that otherwise struggle to access timely primary care. By expanding our fleet to 71 vehicles, we are reaffirming our commitment to equitable healthcare and preventive medicine especially for the most vulnerable populations in our home region.”
The initiative is fully funded through Aster’s CSR budget and supported by partnerships with local NGOs, gram panchayats, and state health departments. All services are provided free of charge, with data from consultations anonymised and used to inform community health trends and advocacy efforts.
The expansion aligns with India’s National Health Policy emphasis on primary and preventive care and complements the Ayushman Bharat scheme by reducing the burden on public facilities through early detection and management of common conditions.
“Healthcare should reach people where they live, not the other way around. Our mobile units bring hope, healing, and prevention directly to the doorstep of those who need it most.”
By
HB Team
