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CAREMOTHER

“Dr. Shantanu Pathak is a technology-driven entrepreneur and social innovator who founded CareMother in March 2015 and Doto Health in 2022. With a PhD from IIT Bombay and a passion for women’s and maternal health, he leads CareMother’s mission to transform low‑resource settings through AI-powered digital tools that improve maternal and neonatal care. Before CareMother, Pathak honed his technical expertise as Head of ICT at Science For Society from 2010 to 2015, where he co‑founded and piloted sustainable health and water‑technology solutions for underserved communities. He also gained early international experience at ZTE Corporation in China, working as Technical Manager in network planning and optimization from 2010 to 2011. Under his leadership, CareMother has been recognized for leveraging AI and digital innovation to tackle maternal health challenges. He frequently speaks at healthcare technology events, for instance, highlighting transformational tech in maternal‑care. Combining technical vision, purpose-driven entrepreneurship, and a strong academic foundation, Dr. Pathak positions CareMother at the forefront of scalable digital healthcare innovation for mothers and newborns.”

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DR. SHANTANU PATHAK

CEO & FOUNDER

NOTES OF CHALLENGES

Rooted in Resilience – From Vidarbha to Vision: I was raised in the Vidarbha region of Maharashtra now classified as an aspirational district by the Indian government. My educational journey began at Navodaya Vidyalaya, a fully government sponsored school that laid the foundation for my values and aspirations. Losing my father at age 13 made healthcare inaccessibility personal and deeply transformative, shaping my lifelong commitment to building equitable systems.
Academic Excellence with Purpose: I earned my bachelor’s degree in Electronics & Telecommunication Engineering from Mumbai University. I later pursued a PhD at IIT Bombay, a pivotal phase that allowed me to explore problem solving through technology. I also worked in Shenzhen, China, gaining early industry experience in telecom systems before returning to India with a focus on socially driven innovation.
Personal Experiences, Not Professional Legacy, Fueled My Direction: When people ask if I come from a family of doctors, I say: “No, I come from a family of patients.” This personal lens helped me understand the pain and delays in accessing basic healthcare, especially for mothers and newborns in underserved areas. These formative experiences led me to work on grassroots innovations as early as 2011, including water filters, solar dryers, and LED lighting systems.
Discovery of a National Problem Worth Solving: I identified maternal and newborn health as a critical area India contributes significantly to global maternal deaths, and over 50% of these are related to undetected high-risk pregnancies. Hypothesis was if frontline workers were equipped to detect anemia, gestational diabetes, and pregnancy induced hypertension early, many of these deaths could be prevented.
Research That Reaches Real Lives: At IIT Bombay, I had the opportunity to work with Professor Rohit Srivastava, whose support enabled me to conduct translational research. This unique approach allowed me to pilot solutions in the field while working on my PhD. During this period, we published impactful data and tested technology directly with health workers and communities to validate our approach, ensuring solutions were both practical and effective.
The Shift to Entrepreneurship: Making Innovation Sustainable: I realized that innovation must be sustainable to scale. This insight led to my transition from researcher to entrepreneur. I had to learn business fundamentals like reading balance sheets, understanding P&L statements, hiring and building teams all while staying grounded in my social mission. Entrepreneurship, I learned, is dynamic blend of science, art, and constant adaptation.
Human Centered Innovation in Action Saves Lives: One case from Bengaluru during COVID-19 stands out: a third trimester patient monitored at home using our fetal monitoring kit showed signs of distress. The alert led to a timely C-section, preventing what could have been a stillbirth. Another example in tribal India showed the emotional power of hearing a baby’s heart beat so compelling that families returned just to hear it again. Over time, we even began sharing heartbeat audio clips via WhatsApp to deepening family engagement making maternal care more personal and emotionally connected.
Building CareMother – Technology with Compassion: I founded Doto Health, better known as CareMother, a digital health company focused on maternal and newborn care. Our product suite includes:
  • Last mile kits for detecting high risk pregnancies.
  • Integrated labor and fetal monitoring systems.
  • Newborn monitoring solutions.
  • A connected care platform with AI based decision support We’ve completed over 2,000 installations across 200+ towns in India and 6 other developing countries.
Global Expansion with Local Impact: To date, CareMother has touched over 600,000 pregnancies. In the next five years, we aim to reach 5 million pregnancies worldwide. We’ve already piloted our solutions in 3 Asian and 3 African countries, with plans to enter developing markets like Middle East Africa and Southeast Asia by 2026, and developed countries like UK and US by 2027, using health care provider led or homecare-based models.
Collaborations that Shape the Future: Key partnerships with government innovation programs like DST, BIRAC, and incubation centers enabled early growth by funding R&D and field trials. We’ve also received grants to test global hypotheses. Attending events like the World Health Assembly in Geneva opened doors for international collaborations, strategic planning, and engagement with policymakers. These alliances are critical to scaling our vision for equitable maternal care across geographies.

MY ROOTS AND EARLY DRIVE:

My roots are in the Vidarbha region of Maharashtra, a place I later discovered was designated an aspirational district by the government. I attended a fully sponsored central government school called Navodaya Vidyalaya, which was the only entrance exam I felt compelled to take. I pursued my PhD at IIT Bombay. Before that, my bachelor’s degree was in electronics and telecommunication engineering from Mumbai University. I also spent a year working in Shenzhen, China, with a telecom equipment company.

My focus, even during engineering, was always on building useful solutions for problems I had seen at the ground level in my school, my society, whether related to health issues or access to doctors. I was 13 when I lost my father, and the challenges we faced travelling for medical care and navigating unknown experts reinforced these concerns. When people ask if I come from a family of doctors because of my work, I tell them, “no, I’m from the family of patients”. This perspective gives me a deeper understanding of the challenges. This initial drive led me to work on various problem-solving projects, like water filters, solar drying, and lighting systems back in 2011.

FINDING THE PROBLEM:

Building on my problem-solving approach, I began looking into key social issues, which led me to focus on maternal and newborn health. This area was also identified as an important sustainable development goal. My personal experiences with healthcare access challenges, coupled with recalling instances of newborn deaths in my hometown, allowed me to relate strongly to the issue. I realized that the impact goes beyond preventing deaths; a healthy pregnancy also contributes to healthier generations. This realization made me want to work on maternal and newborn health problems. My initial hypothesis was that if we could identify high-risk pregnancies earlier, we might prevent complications during labor and birthing, thus potentially reducing maternal mortalities. I learned that this needed systematic research, not just a personal conviction.

THE PATH TO ENTREPRENEURSHIP:

The journey transitioned from being an innovator to a researcher. Meeting Professor Rohit Srivastava at IIT Bombay was pivotal; he invited me to speak, and I eventually became his PhD student. The crucial factor was his willingness to let me pursue translational research on key problems, rather than solely focusing on theoretical research and papers. This environment at IIT Bombay, thanks to its policies, allowed me to undertake pilots and understand the real issues.

Through this process, I discovered that solving the problem is only one part; sustaining the solution so it can impact many lives is equally important. This realization is where the thought of entrepreneurship emerged, around 2018-19. I decided it was essential to build, commercialize, and sustain the solutions I was developing, especially after dedicating significant years to the work. So, my personal journey evolved from an innovator to a researcher, and then to an entrepreneur.

The transition from research to entrepreneurship involved acquiring new skills. While the problem-solving skills gained during PhD are incredibly useful, entrepreneurship is both an art and science. There’s a need for the ‘art’ of managing people and telling stories, but also ‘thumb rules’ often related to business aspects that researchers might not prioritize initially. For instance, I had to learn how to read a balance sheet and P&L statement, skills not typically covered in engineering but essential for a sustainable organization. Understanding financial goals and feasibility is key. This blend of research, entrepreneurship training (through workshops, coaching, or learning on the go), and managing commercial aspects is vital for this journey.

BUILDING THE SOLUTION:

Understanding maternal deaths, I learned from a Gates Foundation paper that a significant portion – 60% globally and 50% in India (combined with obstructed labor and PPH) – are linked to high-risk pregnancies that are often not detected early. Key parameters for high-risk cases include anemia, gestational diabetes, and pregnancy-induced hypertension. Many deaths are linked to postpartum hemorrhage (PPH), related to low hemoglobin, and pregnancy-induced hypertension, leading to preeclampsia or eclampsia. The issue is often that frontline workers were not equipped to monitor these parameters effectively.

The straightforward solution I saw was to equip frontline health workers with a point-of-care device they could use to identify high-risk mothers who need attention at a higher facility. This would allow medical experts to manage their condition more actively. We conducted numerous pilot studies during my PhD and published some data demonstrating this concept. The challenge then became how to productize and commercialize it so the government could adopt it at scale.

Our company, Doto Health, branded as Caremother, now offers digital health and med solutions for healthcare providers. Our goal is to enable them to offer quality, next-generation monitoring for mothers and newborns. We cover the entire journey from conception to newborn care. Our product suite includes a last-mile care kit for high-risk detection and management, a combined solution for fetal labor and birthing monitoring, and newborn monitoring solutions. These are connected care devices with a software platform for decision tools, remote monitoring, and central monitoring. Scaling these solutions in a diverse country like India presents challenges. What works universally might not be feasible for the volume and diversity. System-level challenges include designing for scale, ensuring technology is adaptable, and overcoming the limitations of older systems or trained workforces. For instance, a software designed years ago might become irrelevant by the time it’s fully implemented across the country. Accommodating innovation at scale requires long-term planning, thinking at least 10 years ahead, especially in healthcare where quick plug-ins aren’t feasible.

Despite challenges, we’ve done over 2,000 installations across 200 towns, covering most geographies in India. Our solutions work across different settings, from remote tribal regions to premium hospitals. I believe technology should not discriminate based on place or people; it should function based on principle and offer consistent quality of care.

TECH AT GLANCE

AnandiMaa: An AI-enabled digital platform specifically for pregnancy care in rural areas. It empowers healthcare providers through a public health partnership model, focusing on high-risk pregnancy management. This platform has reached over 12 states in India, supported by more than 1200 health workers and doctors, caring for over 125,000 expecting mothers.
FetoMax: A flagship AI-powered digital Cardiotocography (CTG) machine (fetal monitor). It is portable, wireless, offers AI-powered auto-interpretation, supports real time remote monitoring, provides unlimited test storage, and enables easy report sharing via WhatsApp. Over 850,000 tests have been performed using FetoMax.
BabyBeat: A wireless fetal heart monitor designed for medical-grade DIY home monitoring. It allows expectant mothers to monitor their baby’s heartbeat, alerts and facilitates real-time report sharing with healthcare professionals. BabyBeat was recognized as an impactful healthcare solution in the ZS PRIZE and Stanford Medicine. User testimonials emphasize its ease of use and its potential as a “life savior”.
Nurtura: AI co-pilot with connected devices and decision support tool is world’s first co-pilot for comprehensive labor, birthing and post-birth monitoring, alerts and care pathway. Nurtura ensures 50% reduction in documentation time, remote and centralized monitoring of pregnant woman during labor and provide multiple alerts which manually would have been missed.

MAKING AN EMPACT AND LOOKING AHEAD:

Seeing our technology make a real impact is incredibly rewarding. One powerful story comes from the COVID-19 pandemic when we repurposed our fetal monitoring solution for home and isolation monitoring. Fetal oxygen saturation is crucial, and COVID-19 affects oxygen levels. In one early case in Bangalore, a hospital used our kit for a COVID-positive patient at home in her third trimester. The test results indicated fetal distress, leading the doctor to recommend coming to the hospital. Hospital tests confirmed the issue, and a C-section was performed, which the doctor credited with potentially preventing a intra-uterine death. This demonstrated the agility and impact of the solution. Another touching story comes from rural and tribal areas using our last-mile care kit with fetal monitoring. For many mothers, hearing their baby’s heart sound for the first time is a powerful experience. In one instance, a health worker convinced a family to have a checkup at home. Hearing the fetal heart sound was so impactful that for subsequent checkups, the entire family – father-in-law, husband, kids – came to the health worker’s place just to hear it again. This hearing experience itself helped connect the family more effectively with the mother and baby. Based on this insight, we started sharing one-minute audio clips of the fetal heart sound via WhatsApp when possible, further enhancing this connection. These small actions, unintended initially, created a significant impact. Looking ahead, our aspirations for CareMother extend beyond India. We believe pregnancy is universal, and our solutions can be adapted for health systems in other parts of the world, including developed markets like the UK and US, where health systems also face challenges, and developing markets in Africa and Asia. We have already conducted pilots in at least three Asian and three African countries. Our plan is to enter Asian, Middle East and African markets in the next two years and developed markets in the next three. We anticipate using a hospital or healthcare provider-driven approach in developing markets and potentially offering home care solutions in developed markets. So far, we’ve touched around 600,000 pregnancies, and we aim to reach over 5 million pregnancies in the next five years. Collaborating with the government has been important. Government incubation centers and funding schemes like BIRAC and DST have been crucial, providing early funds that help hire teams and test hypotheses. This funding is vital for deep tech innovators. We even received a fund to test our global expansion hypothesis. While scientific collaborations are easier, there’s still a need for better platforms to connect ready products with operational government departments for implementation and scale. Collaboration with appropriate medical institutions and government entities helps build influence and credibility. Addition to that, attending events like the World Health Assembly in Geneva has been valuable for meeting key people, exploring collaborations, learning from policymakers and innovators, and building strategic partnerships. It’s a platform for learning, networking, and planning future steps.  

Date 01.11.2025

MedTech Innovation, Digital HealthCare Solutions, Deep Tech, Translational Research, Maternal-Child Health

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