
India and Canada Partner on Heart-Diabetes Monitoring Device
A new wearable device will track both blood sugar and heart health in real time, helping millions catch diseases earlier. India's Technology Development Board is backing the innovation to make preventive care more accessible.
Imagine a single device that watches over your heart and blood sugar 24/7, catching warning signs before they become emergencies.
That's exactly what India and Canada are building together. The Technology Development Board has partnered with Drstore Healthcare and Canadian firm Nanospeed Diagnostics to create a breakthrough monitoring device. It combines continuous glucose tracking with cardiovascular biomarkers, giving doctors and patients a complete picture of metabolic health.
The device measures three crucial heart health indicators alongside blood sugar: BNP for heart stress, Troponin-I for heart damage, and hs-CRP for inflammation. All of this happens through analyzing interstitial fluid, the liquid surrounding our cells. Patients can monitor everything from home instead of making repeated hospital visits.
This collaboration is part of the Indo-Canada Collaborative Industrial Research & Development Programme, which brings together scientists from both countries to solve real-world health problems. For India, where diabetes and heart disease often occur together, this technology addresses a critical need.
Drstore Healthcare Service India, founded in 2015, specializes in preventive healthcare solutions. The company will validate the technology and adapt it specifically for Indian healthcare needs. The goal is commercial deployment that makes advanced monitoring affordable and accessible.

The Ripple Effect
This device could transform how millions manage chronic conditions. Right now, most people only get snapshots of their health during doctor visits. Continuous monitoring means catching problems early, when they're easier and cheaper to treat.
The partnership also strengthens India's medical technology ecosystem. By developing indigenous solutions with international collaboration, Indian companies gain cutting-edge expertise while creating products tailored to local needs. This builds capacity for future innovations and reduces dependence on imported medical devices.
Technology Development Board Secretary Rajesh Kumar Pathak highlighted that preventive healthcare solutions are essential for reducing India's long-term disease burden. Remote monitoring keeps high-risk patients safer while freeing up hospital resources for acute care.
The project aligns perfectly with national priorities: expanding affordable healthcare access, advancing digital health adoption, and promoting homegrown medical technologies that understand Indian realities.
A single device watching over two of India's biggest health challenges could save countless lives while proving that international collaboration creates solutions no country could build alone.
Based on reporting by Google: innovation technology
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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