Delhi to Declare Leprosy Notifiable Disease for Better Control

The Delhi government, led by Chief Minister Rekha Gupta, is set to declare leprosy a notifiable disease under the Delhi Epidemic Diseases Act. This will require all healthcare providers to report new cases to the District Leprosy Officer for better surveillance and treatment. India accounts for 59% of global leprosy cases, and hidden cases in private facilities remain a challenge. The move aims to reduce stigma, improve treatment compliance, and support the goal of a leprosy-free Delhi by 2030.

Key Points: Delhi Makes Leprosy Notifiable: Key Public Health Move

  • Mandatory reporting for all healthcare providers
  • Aims to find hidden cases and stop transmission
  • Free Multi-Drug Therapy available
  • Supports India's goal of interrupting transmission by 2030
2 min read

Delhi Govt. to declare Leprosy a notifiable disease under the Delhi Epidemic Diseases Act

Delhi govt declares leprosy a notifiable disease under Epidemic Act to boost surveillance, end transmission, and ensure free treatment.

"Leprosy is completely curable. Making it a notifiable disease will help us find hidden cases, stop transmission, and ensure every patient gets standard treatment with dignity. - Dr. Pankaj Kumar Singh"

New Delhi, May 1

In a major public health decision under the leadership of Chief Minister Rekha Gupta, leprosy is set to be declared a notifiable disease under the Delhi Epidemic Diseases Act. The proposal of the Delhi Health Department has now been submitted for necessary approval. This move positions Delhi among states like Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and West Bengal that have already made leprosy notifiable.

The notification will mandate all government and private healthcare providers, including clinics, hospitals, and individual practitioners, to report every new leprosy case to the District Leprosy Officer. This will enable effective surveillance, targeted interventions, early diagnosis, and prompt treatment with standard Multi-Drug Therapy (MDT), which is available free of cost in government facilities.

Despite India achieving leprosy elimination as a public health problem at the national level in 2005 (prevalence rate below 1 per 10,000 population), the country still accounts for approximately 59% of global annual new leprosy cases.

A recent pan-India study found that 44.1% of leprosy patients are managed by private health facilities and go unreported to the National Leprosy Eradication Programme (NLEP). Hidden cases in the community continue transmission, and variance in treatment protocols raises the threat of drug resistance. WHO's Independent Evaluation of the NLEP program in India suggests that leprosy should be included in the list of diseases mandatory for notification.

Mandatory notification will support early detection and intervention to reduce disability risk, enhanced surveillance in high-endemic and high-risk areas, prevention of transmission through timely contact tracing and post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP), reducing stigma and discrimination by normalising leprosy as a treatable medical condition, better treatment compliance and reduced defaulter rates, and ownership among all healthcare establishments toward the common goal of leprosy eradication.

"Leprosy is completely curable. Making it a notifiable disease will help us find hidden cases, stop transmission, and ensure every patient gets standard treatment with dignity. This is a critical step toward honouring our commitment to a leprosy-free Delhi and supporting India's journey toward interruption of transmission by 2030," said Dr. Pankaj Kumar Singh, Health Minister, Delhi.

The proposed notification will be issued following the advice of the Delhi Government as per the GNCTD Act 1991. Detailed reporting formats and guidelines will be shared with all health institutions and practitioners across the National Capital Territory of Delhi.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good step but I hope the government also focuses on reducing the stigma around leprosy. Many patients avoid treatment because of social discrimination. My grandmother had it and people avoided our family for years. Notification alone won't fix that.
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Sarah B
Interesting approach. As someone who works in public health, mandatory reporting is crucial for disease surveillance. But I wonder how Delhi will enforce this in all the private clinics and small nursing homes. That's always the challenge.
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Rohit P
Excellent news! India still has so many hidden cases. My uncle is a doctor in a private clinic and he says many patients come with nerve damage because they hide their symptoms. Mandatory notification will force early reporting. Hope other states follow Delhi's lead.
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Kavya N
This is a progressive but overdue step. Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra already do this. Why did Delhi take so long? Still, better late than never. Free treatment is great but we need awareness campaigns too—many rural migrants in Delhi don't even know about MDT.
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Michael C
Great public health policy. But let's be honest—will the health department have enough manpower and resources to handle the new reporting workload? The Delhi health system is already stretched. Needs parallel investment in infrastructure and training for field workers.
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Siddharth J

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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