Abstract
This study conducts a bibliometric analysis of 609 publications on health initiatives and the Government of India using the Scopus database from 2003 to 2023. Findings indicate a significant upward trend in research, with a 50.24% annual growth rate. India and USA lead in global research output, with strong collaborations. Key journals and articles with high citation counts and H-index values were identified, with the Indian Journal of Medical Research being the most cited. Keyword analysis revealed four primary clusters: India, health programs, population groups, and communicable disease control. Recent research trends focus on "female," "adult," and "male" health, while "tuberculosis," "adolescent health," and "public health programs" and continue gaining prominence. Emerging topics include "middle-aged health" and "communicable disease control." India's health sector is transforming toward universal health coverage through policies like the National Health Policy 2017, aiming to increase public health expenditure to 2.5% of GDP by 2025. Key initiatives include expanding primary healthcare via Ayushman Arogya Mandirs, deploying Community Health Officers, and implementing digital health solutions under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission. The AB-PMJAY scheme has significantly reduced healthcare costs for vulnerable populations, while CoWIN and investments in indigenous manufacturing demonstrate India's commitment to healthcare innovation. Limitations include reliance on Scopus, excluding PubMed and Google Scholar, and potential analytical constraints due to near-synonyms and duplicate entries. Despite these, this study offers valuable insights into India's health policy research, highlighting trends, collaborations, and emerging priorities. Future research should integrate multiple databases and advanced analytics to assess policy impact and regional disparities. This study serves as a foundational resource for understanding India's evolving health policy landscape.