Telemedicine for Remote and Underserved Communities in Pakistan

By Sehat Kahani Editorial Team ·

Pakistan’s healthcare system was not designed for the majority of Pakistan. Virtually every specialist, and most qualified GPs, are concentrated in Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, and a handful of other urban centres. For a patient in rural Punjab, interior Sindh, or the hills of KP, accessing anything beyond basic primary care has historically meant a full day’s travel, significant expense, and — for many women — the added constraint of needing a male family member to accompany them.

Telemedicine is not a complete solution to this structural problem. But it is the fastest, most scalable tool currently available to compress that distance — and platforms like Sehat Kahani have built their model specifically around the communities most affected.

The Scale of the Access Gap

The consequences of healthcare inaccessibility in underserved areas are well-documented at both global and regional levels:

How Telemedicine Addresses These Barriers

Telemedicine doesn’t require a doctor to move to an underserved area — it brings the consultation to wherever the patient is.

Geographic distance collapses. A qualified GP in Karachi can conduct a thorough consultation with a patient in Dera Ismail Khan in real time. The only requirements are a device and internet connectivity — and mobile broadband coverage across Pakistan continues to expand.

Specialist access opens up. Even when a rural patient cannot travel to see a cardiologist or psychiatrist in person, they can receive an initial specialist consultation online, understand whether an in-person referral is truly necessary, and arrive at that appointment better informed if it is.

Women access female doctors. A female-doctor option removes one of the most significant barriers to care for women in culturally conservative communities. Sehat Kahani’s founding purpose — and its network design — addresses this directly.

Chronic care becomes sustainable. Monthly follow-ups for diabetes management or blood pressure monitoring no longer require a trip to the city. They happen on a phone or tablet, in 15 minutes, without disrupting work or family responsibilities.

What Are E-Clinics and Why Do They Matter?

A purely app-based telemedicine model has an obvious limitation in underserved areas: it requires a smartphone and the technical familiarity to use one. For older patients, those with limited literacy, or households without personal devices, the app doesn’t help.

E-clinics solve this. An e-clinic is a fixed community point — a room, a kiosk, or a designated space in a health centre — equipped with a screen, camera, internet connection, and sometimes basic diagnostic equipment. The patient visits the e-clinic in their local community. The doctor is remote. A local health worker assists with the session.

This model brings telemedicine to patients who will never download an app — and Sehat Kahani has built it out as a deliberate extension of its mission to reach underserved communities, not just urban smartphone users. The number and locations of its e-clinics are best confirmed directly on the company’s website, as the network is actively growing.

The Conditions That Benefit Most

The populations in underserved areas with the most immediate practical gain from telemedicine are managing:

What Telemedicine Still Cannot Do

Honesty about limitations matters as much as enthusiasm about possibilities. Telemedicine in remote areas still faces:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can telemedicine handle serious conditions in remote areas? It handles triage, chronic condition management, and follow-up effectively. Serious conditions requiring physical examination, surgery, or emergency care still need in-person treatment. What telemedicine does is help patients understand quickly which category their situation falls into — and navigate from there.

What if internet connectivity is unreliable? Audio-only consultations require significantly less bandwidth than video. E-clinics are specifically set up for areas with infrastructure constraints — the hardware, connectivity, and staff support are provided on-site.

How can an institution or community set up a Sehat Kahani e-clinic? For partnership and expansion inquiries, contact Sehat Kahani directly through sehatkahani.com.

Is there a cost to patients at e-clinics? Pricing varies by location and program type. Contact Sehat Kahani directly for current details.


The distance between a patient in rural Pakistan and a qualified doctor has always been more than geographic. It is a distance of access, culture, and infrastructure. Telemedicine compresses all three — not perfectly, and not without remaining challenges, but meaningfully and immediately. For communities at the far end of that gap, Sehat Kahani’s combination of on-demand app access and on-the-ground e-clinic infrastructure is the most practical bridge currently available. Learn more at sehatkahani.com.

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