UNDP-Backed Digital Platforms U-WIN & eVIN Strengthen India’s Immunisation System: Reports
U-WIN and eVIN have reinforced the backbone of India’s digital health infrastructure by linking service delivery with supply chain management.
Government-led digital platforms supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), including U-WIN and eVIN, have significantly strengthened India’s immunisation ecosystem by improving service tracking, vaccine logistics, and last-mile delivery, the UN agency said in its Annual Report 2025.
The report highlights how digital public infrastructure has enabled India to deliver health services at a population scale while ensuring real-time monitoring and data-driven decision-making.
According to the report, U-WIN has helped track immunisation services for around 32 million pregnant women and 97 million children, providing a unified digital system to record vaccinations, reduce dropouts, and support continuity of care.
Designed as a national immunisation registry, U-WIN builds on India’s experience with large-scale digital platforms such as CoWIN and is aimed at strengthening routine immunisation beyond pandemic response.
Complementing this, the Electronic Vaccine Intelligence Network (eVIN) has enabled end-to-end visibility of vaccine stocks and cold-chain temperatures across more than 30,000 cold-chain points nationwide.
The system has monitored over 650 million vaccine doses, helping reduce wastage, prevent stock-outs, and ensure vaccines remain safe and effective until they reach beneficiaries.
Together, U-WIN and eVIN have reinforced the backbone of India’s digital health infrastructure by linking service delivery with supply chain management.
The report also documents progress across Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) localisation, acceleration, and financing. SDG coordination mechanisms are now institutionalised across key ministries, while monitoring frameworks are operational in 33 of 36 States and Union Territories, improving how data informs planning and budgeting at the subnational level.
Angela Lusigi, Resident Representative, UNDP India, said, “India's development progress in 2025 reflects strong government leadership in delivering at scale through public systems. These systems are delivered across health, insurance, care, and climate action, reaching women, children, farmers, waste workers, and low-income households.”
“UNDP is proud to have supported these efforts by strengthening technical expertise, helping public programmes function more effectively and respond faster when support was needed,” she added.
The report further notes that India’s digital public health platforms are increasingly being shared through South-South cooperation.
Systems such as U-WIN and eVIN have been shared with countries including Zambia and Lao PDR to strengthen immunisation tracking and vaccine supply chains, reflecting India’s growing role in exporting digital health solutions.
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