Delhi-based Health Parliament has announced the acquisition of UHC.org in a move that could reshape how the world collaborates on healthcare access.
The acquisition positions Health Parliament as the first unified global platform dedicated to advancing Universal Health Coverage by bringing together international programmes, policy expertise, and multi-stakeholder collaborations under a single digital ecosystem.
The integration of UHC.org is being seen as a defining moment for global health cooperation at a time when nations continue to struggle with fragmentation, rising costs, and uneven access to care.
The new platform is designed to change how global health policy is shaped and implemented. Instead of operating through scattered initiatives, UHC.org will enable a coordinated model where policy innovation, community-level implementation, and cross-border partnerships work together.
Health Parliament will consolidate several initiatives under this domain, including Digital Health Sans Borders, a global campaign launched in Geneva during the 78th World Health Assembly on 19 May 2025 to promote equitable access to digital health tools by 2030. The Global Commission for 21st Century Healthcare, led by twelve global leaders, will also be anchored on UHC.org and is expected to launch at a side event during the UN General Assembly High-Level Meeting in December 2025.
The preliminary consultation for this commission took place in Germany on 12 November 2025. The platform will also feature the global movement Data First. AI Later, which emphasizes that strong data foundations must come before building AI-driven health systems.
The acquisition also marks a significant expansion of Health Parliament’s digital footprint. The organization had earlier acquired IndianHealthcareBlog.com, reflecting its growing intention to influence, govern, and help deliver healthcare solutions across regions. With UHC.org, it aims to provide a structured pathway for countries and institutions to collaborate on standards, innovation, and financing models that support the United Nations goal of achieving Universal Health Coverage by 2030.