Institution Name: Asian Development Research Institute, Patna, Bihar
Event Type: International Conference
Conference Name: International Conference on Innovations in Health Information Technology in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs)
Conference Theme: Health Information Technology in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs)
Conference Start Date: 28-11-2025
Conference End Date: 29-11-2025
About Conference: The central theme of the conference is: Health Information Technology in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs)”We welcome submissions that address innovative, practical, and scalable applications of health IT in LMIC contexts. Authors from LMICs or whose research focuses on LMIC-related challenges and solutions are especially encouraged to contribute.
Call for papers:
We would like to invite you articles on Innovations in Health Information Technology in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs).
Last date of submission of manuscript: August 31, 2025
Thematic Tracks:
Our primary interest lies in broad themes related to health and technology in LMICs; however, we remain open to relevant contributions that extend beyond these domains.
- Digital Health Infrastructure & Policy
- AI & Data Analytics in Healthcare
- Mobile Health (mHealth) & Telemedicine
- Electronic Health Records & Interoperability
- Community-Centered Digital Health Innovations
- Cybersecurity, Ethics & Data Governance
Important Dates:
- Paper Submission Deadline: 31st August 2025
- Notification of Acceptance: 30th September 2025
- Camera-Ready Submission: 20th October 2025
- Conference Dates: 28th-29th November 2025
Contact:
Institution Website: https://adriindia.org/
Address:
Asian Development Research Institute,
ADRI, BSIDC Colony, Off Boring Patliputra Road,
Patna 800 013
Conference Website: Click here
About the Institute: ADRI Society was first conceived during the late eighties, when the institution of state has started getting weaker and at least concomitantly, if not consequently, the growth process was becoming increasingly non-inclusive. Some articles had appeared during those years which were close to an obituary for development economics, as the trend was fairly worldwide and not limited to India alone. Along with the weakening of the state, there was the obvious trend of weakening of many state-supported educational institutions, including the universities and the research institutes. At this point, the members of the ADRI Society strongly felt that, for the development research to remain alive, it needs to modify its agenda and, secondly, it also equally needs an alternative institutional base. The Research Institute was a response to this challenge.

