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Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Global Summit on AI for Mental Health: India’s Historic Leap in Responsible AI Governance

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In a historic convergence of policy, technology, and compassion, the Global Summit on AI for Mental Health 2025, held at the India International Centre, culminated not just in dialogue, but in a decisive, action-oriented national mandate.

The event, marked by the formidable presence of India’s most respected policy architects, served as the launchpad for a native, ‘India-first’ ecosystem designed to ensure Artificial Intelligence serves the unique mental health needs of Bharat.

The summit’s gravitas was defined by its Chief Guest, Prabhat Kumar, IAS (Retd.), Former Cabinet Secretary and President of the IC Centre for Governance, who lent his monumental authority to the proceedings. In a symbolic moment, he led the dignitaries in dedicating the Bharat Responsible AI Framework to the nation, signalling a collective and unwavering commitment to a sovereign tech future.

The strategic vision and architectural backbone of this national initiative were steered by Balvinder Kumar, IAS (Retd.), the driving force behind the summit. A former Secretary to the Government of India and a man with a decade-long commitment to an India-first tech ethos, Kumar formally declared the UDAAN AI Mental Health Solutions Framework and the Bharat Responsible AI Forum. His leadership exemplified the ‘action bureaucrat’ spirit, translating vision into a tangible, governance-ready architecture.

‘This is not another talk shop’, he underscored. ‘This is about building executable frameworks that are rooted in our soil.’

The summit was notably attended by the ‘Who’s Who’ of the Indian governance ecosystem, including Sunil Kumar Barnwal, IAS, CEO of the National Health Authority, Deepak Bagla, Mission Director of Atal Innovation Mission, NITI Aayog, Dr. Sudha Goel, Senior Consultant (Health), NITI Aayog, Dr. Prachi Sharda, WHO Mental Health Consultant, Ira Singhal, IAS, UPSC Topper 2014, Dr Rajesh Mishra, MD, NICSI and a host of other senior IAS officers, both serving and retired, creating a powerful tacit endorsement for the initiatives launched.

The execution and narrative force of the summit were powered by a dedicated leadership team. The strategic announcements for the Bharat Responsible AI Forum, the Emerging Technology Council, and the AI Mental Health Innovation Fellowships (AMHIF) were made by Aman Bandvi, the summit’s co-convenor and a recognised futurist. Orchestrating the monumental gathering was Yash Arya, Founder GlobalSpin Forum and a niche event leader for over two decades, and an ethical AI advocate.

This collective effort was bolstered by a core organizing team including Sakshi Chhapolia, Dr. Sumit Dubey, and Dr. Poonam Tyagi, Co-Founders of UDAAN AI, Bhavna Sharma, Partner at Ishaa Creations, Dr. Vijay Goel, Debi Prasad, and Deepshikha Kashyap from GlobalSpin Forum, and Dr. Sachin Goyal of UDAAN Skill Academy, whose seamless coordination was instrumental in translating a bold vision into a landmark reality.

A highlight of the summit was an inspirational address by Ira Singhal, IAS, whose powerful personal journey and advocacy for mental health and disability inclusion brought a profound human perspective to the technological discourse.

The key outcomes and institutional milestones achieved through this historic summit were, firstly, the creation of the Bharat Responsible AI Forum & Framework, a first-of-its-kind multi-stakeholder body, established with the IC Centre for Governance, dedicated to advocacy, governance, and policy for ethical AI, firmly embedded in the Indian ethos.

Secondly, the UDAAN AI Mental Health Solutions Framework, a comprehensive, practice-oriented framework for organisations, educational institutions, and healthcare providers to deploy AI solutions responsibly.

Next, the Emerging Technology Council, a think-tank unveiled with a formal charter, committed to strategic foresight and strengthening the national innovation ecosystem. Further, the Inaugural AI Mental Health Innovation Fellows (AMHIF), a fellowship to develop India-specific research on workplace mental resilience, creating a pipeline of future-ready talent.

And finally, leading startups and corporates, including UDAAN AI, BharatGPT, HRAI, MindPeers, Lisners, Wysa, and TalktoAngel, became inaugural signatories to the charter, committing to its principles.

During the event, the International Technical Session featured luminaries like Dr. Peter Phiri (UK), AVATAR VR-assisted therapy expert; Dr. Laura Vowels (Switzerland/UK), Digital health and family therapy; Dr. Stephanie Okolo (US Army), CBT in military mental health; and Dr. Hikari Takashina & Dr. Fumito Takahashi (Japan), Awarefy’s AI-driven mental wellness research.

Their unanimous observation was that India’s frameworks are more comprehensive than many Western equivalents—particularly UDAAN’s emphasis on cultural adaptation, linguistic diversity, and community-centered care.

Dr. Phiri remarked, ‘The UK’s AI in health regulation is fragmented. India has the opportunity to leapfrog by building integrated, sector-specific frameworks from the start. UDAAN AI is that framework.’

It is important to note that what distinguished this summit from routine conferences was its actionable outputs like, firstly, concrete frameworks ready for deployment, UDAAN AI and Bharat Responsible AI Charter are not aspirational—they are implementation-ready with defined assessment criteria, certification processes, and institutional homes. Secondly, institutional commitments, The Centre of Excellence, Emerging Technology Council, and AMHIF Fellows program have dedicated budgets, timelines, and leadership teams.

Next, policy pathways, NHA’s interest in MHAIMM certification creates a clear government adoption route—not hypothetical but probable. Further, ecosystem activation, 30-40 startups registering for Phase 1 of the Centre of Excellence network means implementation begins immediately, not in a distant ‘Phase 2’.

And finally, research pipeline, AMHIF’s call for students generated enthusiastic response—fellowships will launch by Q1 2026, producing India’s first cohort of AI-mental health governance experts.

Several factors establish the Global Summit on AI for Mental Health 2025 as the definitive annual gathering on this theme in India. Firstly, unmatched convening power, no other forum has assembled Former Cabinet Secretaries, serving IAS officers, NHA/NITI Aayog/WHO leadership, international experts, and startup founders under one roof for a full day of structured deliberation.

Unlike talk-shops, this summit launched frameworks, signed charters, announced fellowships, and constituted councils. Further, by positioning bureaucratic wisdom (Balvinder Kumar), ethical advocacy (Yash Arya), and futurist execution (Aman Bandvi) as co-leaders, the summit achieved legitimacy across constituencies.

In an era of imported frameworks, the summit’s India-native, culturally rooted approach resonated—filling a vacuum in policy discourse. And with IC Centre for Governance as anchor and annual plans declared, this becomes a recurring national dialogue, not a one-off event.

The summit succeeded in converting corporate and startup players from passive attendees to active governance partners. First, Bank of Baroda (Presenting Partner), India’s leading PSU bank’s participation signals growing recognition that mental health impacts workforce productivity—and AI-driven Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) need quality standards.

Secondly, CMR Green Technologies (Presenting Partner), their involvement reflects the sustainability-mental health nexus—climate anxiety, eco-distress—emerging areas where AI can play a role.

Next, Startup Signatories (WYSA, MindPeers, Lisners, TalktoAngel, UDAAN AI), by signing the Bharat Responsible AI Charter, these companies voluntarily submitted to ethical scrutiny—a maturity rare in startup ecosystems typically averse to regulation.

Followed by the HR Association of India (represented by Dr. Vikas Vats), the Association’s presentation on ‘Human Intelligence 3.0’—integrating AI, psychology, and ancient Indian cognitive science—demonstrated India’s unique capacity to blend tradition with technology.

Finally, BharatGPT’s Vision, Taresh Verma’s presentation positioned India as a global hub for multilingual, sovereign AI—aligning with the summit’s Bharat-first ethos.

The Global Summit on AI for Mental Health 2025 has unequivocally positioned itself as the apex forum on the subject. It successfully moved beyond deliberation to deliver a consensus-driven action plan, setting a definitive course for a future where India’s technological advancement is synonymous with its ethical commitment to the mental well-being of its billion-strong population.

The organizers are also thankful to gifting partners, KIWI Kisan Window and Indian Nurserymen Association.

 

Sonakshi Datta
Sonakshi Datta
Journalist who wants to cover the truth which others look the other way from.

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