WJCF is an Indian non-profit organisation committed to saving lives by reducing the burden of disease and strengthening government-owned, high-quality health systems. Since 2007, WJCF has combined data-driven approaches and deep public health expertise with strong government partnerships to design, implement, and scale solutions across India’s national and state health programmes. We work for and at the service of governments — supporting the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare and State Departments of Health to build systems that are strong, sustainable, and led by Indian institutions.
As an Indian organisation, WJCF brings an unmatched depth of contextual understanding of India’s health system architecture, policy landscape, and implementation realities across diverse geographies and population groups. This local institutional credibility, combined with global technical rigour, is central to WJCF’s effectiveness as a partner to governments and donors.
Our work is built around four complementary roles: as a Trusted Government Partner, co-designing programmes and strengthening health system architecture; as an Operational Partner, translating strategies into effective on-the-ground delivery; as a Market Shaper, improving the availability and affordability of health commodities; and as an Ecosystem Catalyst, convening governments, development partners, academia, and the private sector to drive solutions at scale.
WJCF’s programme portfolio spans thematic areas like hepatitis, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, vector-borne diseases), syphilis, cervical cancer, diabetes, maternal and childhood anaemia, immunisation, under-5 diarrhoea and pneumonia, sexual and reproductive health, Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri – Jan Arogya Yojana (AB PM-JAY), Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM), hypoxemia and oxygen, safe drinking water, sickle cell disease, presbyopia, lead poisoning, and cross cutting thematic areas like AI and Health, integrated disease surveillance, and climate and health.
We currently support programmes across 19 states and union territories, with teams working at national, state, district, and sub-district levels.
Our people are our greatest asset. WJCF brings together a talented, diverse team of professionals from public health, analytics, consulting, healthcare, the development sector, and academia, all united by a shared commitment to improving health outcomes for the people of India. We are entrepreneurial, action-oriented, and deeply grounded in the communities and systems we work in. Our field teams collectively bring hundreds of years of experience managing public health programmes across the country.
WJCF collaborates with a range of international and domestic partners and donors to advance its mission, including an affiliation with the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), a global health organisation with which WJCF shares a common mission and values.
About the Program:
The National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP), led by the Central TB Division (CTD), MoHFW, is working towards TB elimination in line with the Sustainable Development Goals. WJCF has supported the CTD and more than fifteen state health departments on TB programming since 2012, with interventions across preventive therapies, case detection, diagnostics access, private-sector engagement, strategic planning, and service delivery
About the Project:
More than half of all people with TB in India first seek care from private providers, yet private-sector notifications account for only about one-third of total cases. A key driver of this gap is the limited availability of WHO-recommended rapid molecular diagnostics in private clinics. Existing platforms like GeneXpert and Truenat, though accurate, require dedicated infrastructure, stable power, and high per-test costs, making them unsuitable for routine point-of-care use. This leads to referrals and significant drop-outs along the diagnostic cascade.
The Huwel UniAmp NAT Device (Huwel Lifesciences, Telangana) is a palm-sized, battery-operated, isothermal amplification platform validated by ICMR for near point-of-care (nPOC) TB testing. Paired with the Quantiplus® MTB FAST cartridge, it delivers MTB-Detected/Not Detected results in 35–60 minutes. It is currently the only ICMR-validated indigenous nPOC NAT system, significantly more affordable than existing platforms, and works with both sputum and tongue swabs.
The nPOC Operational Feasibility Study, Ahmedabad, is a prospective, mixed-methods implementation study evaluating two deployment models in private clinics:
Both models run alongside a control site using the standard referral pathway. GeneXpert MTB/RIF at STDC Ahmedabad serves as the reference standard. The study assesses diagnostic cascade completion, concordance with GeneXpert, operational performance, cost-effectiveness, and NTEP linkage outcomes. Findings will guide NTEP, the State TB Cell, and partners on the viability of nPOC molecular TB diagnostics in India’s private sector.
Objective of the Assignment:
WJCF seeks to engage an Independent Contractor with specialised microbiology expertise to provide scientific and technical inputs for the laboratory-side of the nPOC Operational Feasibility Study across all study sites in Ahmedabad. The Contractor will exercise independent professional judgement in their area of expertise to deliver the outputs set out in Section 5, in line with the study protocol, manufacturer’s instructions for use, ICMR guidance, and applicable biosafety and data-protection standards.
Scope of Work:
The Contractor will independently determine the manner, method, and sequencing of work required to deliver the outputs below, subject to the protocol, agreed timelines, and quality expectations defined in the ICA. The Contractor is not integrated into WJCF’s employee reporting structure and will not supervise WJCF employees, volunteers, or other WJCF independent contractors. Where training or competency assessments are delivered to third-party clinic and laboratory staff at private-sector study sites, this is in the Contractor’s capacity as an external technical expert engaged for the study.
1. Laboratory and device operations
2. Training, SOPs, and competency
3. Data, analysis, and reporting
4. Stakeholder engagement
5. Ethics, regulatory, and protocol fidelity
Deliverables and Indicative Milestones:
Final deliverable definitions, acceptance criteria, payment values, and dates will be set out in the ICA. Indicative deliverable categories, mapped to study phases, are as follows:
Desirable Skills:
Professional Skills:
Last Date to Apply: 10th August, 2026
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