ActiveMind Daily Launches Doctor-Led Brain Wellness Pilot for Older Adults in India
ActiveMind Daily, a physician-led brain wellness initiative under BlueprintRx, has launched a 10-day pilot programme for older adults in India. Developed by Dr. Sweta Sahu and Dr. Sri Sravya Thungathurthi, the initiative promotes cognitive engagement, memory, language skills, and family connection through science-based daily activities designed for healthy ageing.
Seeking to address this gap, a physician-led team headed by Dr. Sweta Sahu has launched ActiveMind Daily, a brain wellness initiative under the healthcare venture BlueprintRx. The programme is inviting 50 founding families to participate in a 10-day pilot designed to promote cognitive wellness among older adults through simple, science-based daily activities.
The initiative has been developed specifically for seniors living in Indian households and focuses on memory, language, attention, reflection, and family engagement. Participants receive one short activity each day that is designed to encourage meaningful mental stimulation without requiring digital literacy or prolonged screen use.
The launch comes at a time when India’s elderly population is expanding rapidly. While chronic conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease are routinely monitored and treated, preventive brain health measures often receive little attention until signs of cognitive decline become evident. ActiveMind Daily aims to bring cognitive engagement and social connection into everyday elder care, encouraging families to prioritize brain wellness alongside physical health.
Unlike many conventional wellness applications, the programme does not require seniors to log in or spend time on screens. It has been structured around the realities of Indian family life, allowing activities to be completed independently, with assistance from family members, or through brief conversations between parents and adult children living in different cities or countries.
The daily activities are rooted in culturally familiar experiences and encourage participants to recall childhood celebrations, memorable songs, regional sayings, and traditional food customs. The programme is designed to feel conversational and engaging rather than clinical, making participation accessible and enjoyable for older adults.
Participants receive reminders through messaging services or telephone calls, while progress tracking has been simplified to encourage consistency. Families who complete the first seven days of the programme are eligible to receive a surprise gift. The initiative also allows missed sessions to be completed later, emphasizing sustained participation rather than strict perfection.
ActiveMind Daily has been developed by physicians who advocate for making brain health a routine component of preventive healthcare. Dr. Sweta Sahu, Founder of the initiative, is a physician and researcher with research and clinical experience at Johns Hopkins, the Cleveland Clinic, and the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She is the recipient of the American Heart Association’s 2025 Paul Dudley White International Scholar Award and has contributed to more than 100 publications across cardiovascular medicine, gastroenterology, and population health.
Speaking about the initiative, Dr. Sahu said that brain wellness should not wait for symptoms to appear and that the objective is to make daily cognitive engagement as familiar and routine as a morning cup of tea, creating an activity that families can enjoy together.
Dr. Sri Sravya Thungathurthi, Physician and Co-founder of ActiveMind Daily, brings experience in healthy ageing and preventive medicine shaped by exposure to healthcare systems in both India and the United States. She said the programme was designed to meet families in their everyday environments rather than clinical settings. According to her, brain health remains one of the most neglected aspects of healthy ageing in India, particularly in an era dominated by short-form content, constant distractions, and passive consumption. She emphasized that the initiative seeks to foster lifelong learning, curiosity, creativity, and meaningful mental engagement rather than focusing solely on preventing decline.
The programme is supported by a growing network of doctors, medical interns, and students of Indian origin studying in United States high schools. Working alongside the physician leadership team, they contribute to research, programme development, participant feedback, and continuous improvements aimed at ensuring the initiative remains relevant to the needs of Indian seniors and their families.
The activity framework used by ActiveMind Daily is guided by evidence-based public health recommendations on cognitive health and healthy ageing issued by the World Health Organization and the National Institute on Aging.
The 10-day founding families pilot has now opened registrations and is limited to 50 families in its first batch. Prospective participants can begin with a brief brain wellness assessment and experience sample activities before joining the programme.
The initiative represents a growing effort to place brain health at the centre of preventive elder care, encouraging families to view cognitive wellness, social connection, and mental engagement as essential components of healthy ageing alongside traditional physical healthcare.

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