World Disability Day 2025: How healthtech is making life easier for people with disabilities

World disability day 2025 healthtech for disability management

Over 1.3 billion people worldwide live with some form of disability. That’s nearly one in six people. Yet for many, the toughest part isn’t the disability itself. It’s navigating a world that wasn’t built for them.

A world where public spaces remain inaccessible. Where digital platforms overlook their needs. Where workplaces and education systems often assume less capability instead of enabling full potential.

This leads to something far more painful than the disability: feeling excluded, overlooked, invisible, or dependent.

That’s why World Disability Day, observed every year on December 3, continues to matter.

This year’s theme, “Fostering disability-inclusive societies for advancing social progress,” highlights that real progress isn’t possible unless everyone can participate equally.

The good news is: a new wave of healthtech innovators is stepping up, building technologies that remove barriers and empower people with disabilities to live with independence, dignity, and confidence.

Let’s explore why this day matters and how healthtech is helping reshape accessibility for millions.

Why World Disability Day matters

World Disability Day brings global attention to the rights, dignity, and everyday challenges faced by persons with disabilities. It encourages governments, educators, employers, and communities to work together and remove barriers that limit opportunities.

It’s a moment to pause and ask:

Are we truly building a world where everyone can move, learn, communicate, work, and live with freedom and respect?

Understanding disabilities: A quick overview

Disability comes in many forms. Not all disabilities are visible, and not all experiences are the same. Broadly, they fall into these categories:

  • Physical disabilities: These affect mobility and movement, conditions like spinal cord injuries, limb loss, muscular dystrophy, arthritis, and cerebral palsy.
  • Sensory disabilities: These include visual impairments, hearing impairments, and speech limitations.
  • Intellectual and developmental disabilities: This includes autism, Down syndrome, learning disabilities, and developmental delays.
  • Neurodiversity and cognitive disabilities: These affect thinking, attention, memory, or processing, like ADHD, dyslexia, dementia, and other cognitive conditions.
  • Mental health-related disabilities: Conditions like severe depression or anxiety that can also limit daily functioning.

9 healthtech startups driving change, making lives easier

Around the world, healthtech innovators are designing tools that help people with disabilities live with more independence, dignity, and confidence. Here are some of them making a difference:

1. NeoMotion

Founder: Swostik Sourav Dash, Ashish Mohan Sharma, Siddhart Daga, Vivek Sarda

Year: 2016 | Country: India

NeoMotion creates mobility products that help users move with greater freedom. Their NeoFly wheelchair is customized to fit each user, and the NeoBolt attachment converts it into a motorized scooter for outdoor travel. These products give users independence and reduce the need for constant support.

2. Avaz Inc.

Founder: Ajit Narayanan

Year: 2007 | Country: California

Avaz develops Augmentative and Alternative Communication apps for children and adults with autism, cerebral palsy, and speech disorders. Their apps use icons, images, and text to help users express thoughts, share needs, and participate in conversations confidently.

3. Torchit

Founder: Hunny Bhagchandani

Year: 2017 | Country: India

Torchit has built affordable assistive devices, including Saarthi, a handheld mobility aid that helps visually impaired individuals detect obstacles using vibrations. They also offer Handicare for easier lower limb mobility.

4. Munevo

Founders: Claudiu Leverenz, Konstantin Madaus, Deepesh Pandey and Aashish Trivedi

Year: 2018 | Country: Germany

Munevo has created an innovative wheelchair control system powered by smart glasses. Users can move their wheelchairs using simple head movements, making it ideal for people who cannot use their hands due to spinal injuries or neuromuscular conditions.

5. ABLE Human Motion

Founders: Alfons Carnicero, Alex Garcia, and Josep M. Font

Year: 2018 | Country: Spain

ABLE Human Motion builds lightweight robotic exoskeletons that help people with spinal cord injuries stand and walk. Their exoskeleton increases rehabilitation efficiency and offers users the emotional comfort of upright mobility.

6. Liftware (acquired by Google)

Founder: Anupam Pathak

Year: 2014 | Country: United States

Liftware has created smart utensils that stabilize hand tremors. Their electronic handle cancels shaking and helps users eat more comfortably. It is widely used by people with Parkinson’s and essential tremor.

7. Signvrse

Founders: Elly Savatia and Branice Kazira

Year: 2023 | Country: Africa (Kenya)

Signvrse is building an AI-powered sign language translation platform. It converts spoken or written language into sign language using animated avatars. This helps improve communication for Deaf and hard-of-hearing communities across Africa.

8.  OneStep

Founders: Yuval Naveh, Tomer Shussman, Shahar Davidson, and Amir Milo

Year: 2019 | Country: Israel and the United States

OneStep uses smartphone sensors to track gait, balance and mobility. Their app helps people in rehabilitation or with mobility disabilities receive personalised therapy plans and fall risk assessments directly through their phone.

9. Phoenix Instinct

Founder: Andrew Slorance

Year: 2015 | Country: United Kingdom

Phoenix Instinct designs “smart” manual wheelchairs with AI-driven stability and adaptive centre-of-gravity systems. Their wheelchairs aim to redefine traditional designs, improving safety, manoeuvrability, and user comfort for people with lower-limb paralysis or mobility disabilities.

Parting words

As we mark World Disability Day 2025, we must remember that inclusion isn’t optional; it’s essential. And technology is emerging as one of the most powerful drivers of this change.

However, technology alone cannot build an inclusive world. It takes awareness, empathy, and the willingness to adapt.

A truly inclusive society is one where all of us move forward together, without leaving anyone behind.

-By Rinkle Dudhani and the AHT Team

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