Strava Healthcare manufactures ORS sachets in India to the WHO-UNICEF low-osmolarity standard. ORS is the primary treatment for dehydration from diarrhoea, vomiting, heat, and exertion. It is on the WHO Essential Medicines List and is used across government health programs, hospital pharmacies, and retail pharmacy.
United Arab Emirates, Ghana, francophones African countries like Senegal, Mali, Ivory Coast, Benin, Togo, Chad, Niger as well as in eastern Africa like Kenya, South Sudan, Sudan, DRC Congo. Moreover, in Myanmar, Cambodia and Vietnam and also in LATAM and south americalcontries like Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, Guyana, Suriname.
How ORS Works?
Applications
- Acute diarrhoea and gastroenteritis in adults and children
- Rehydration in cholera and infectious enteritis
- Post-exercise electrolyte replenishment
- Rehydration in elderly patients
- Government program and NGO supply
Flavours and Packaging Options
For B2B and Pharma Partners
- Contract manufacturing with custom branding, flavours, and packaging
- Private label ORS sachets, ready to market
- Bulk supply for government programs, NGOs, hospital chains, and export
Product specifications
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
Formulation | WHO low-osmolarity ORS (245 mOsm/L) |
Key ingredients | Sodium chloride, Potassium chloride, Sodium citrate, Glucose |
Dosage form | Powder sachet |
Pack sizes | 21.8 g sachet (1 L); 10s, 20s strips; bulk cartons |
Flavours | Plain, Mango, Orange, Lemon |
Storage | Cool, dry place |
Shelf life | 24 months |
Manufacturer | Strava Healthcare Private Limited |
Frequently Asked Questions
For mild to moderate dehydration in children under 5, WHO guidance is 50 to 100 mL per kg over 3 to 4 hours. Small sips, frequently. Children often vomit if given too much too fast, so pace it. If the child looks severely dehydrated, lethargic, or is not urinating — that is IV territory, not ORS at home.
Yes. Keep breastfeeding — do not stop during rehydration. For formula-fed infants, speak to a doctor before changing anything about the feeding routine, since the sodium load needs to be considered alongside what else the infant is getting.
Generally yes. The concern with elderly patients who have kidney disease or heart failure is the sodium and potassium content. In those cases it should be used under medical supervision, not handed over and left to them to manage independently.
Yes. We supply WHO-standard ORS sachets to government health programs and institutional procurement. GMP certificates, batch records, and COAs are provided as standard.
