India Targets 60% Childhood Cancer Survival by 2030 with New Funding Push

A Union Health Ministry official announced the government's target to achieve a 60% survival rate for childhood cancer by 2030, assuring innovative funding models. The announcement was made at an International Childhood Cancer Day event, where progress was highlighted, including access to care doubling to over 54%. Experts emphasized the need for better coordination and data sharing among stakeholders to capture more patients and improve outcomes. The event also recognized the efforts of nine state governments that have made childhood cancer a child health priority.

Key Points: India Aims for 60% Childhood Cancer Survival Rate by 2030

  • 60% survival target by 2030
  • Innovative funding models assured
  • 9 states sign MoUs for priority
  • Access to care doubled since 2019-20
3 min read

Health Ministry official outlines target of 60 pc survival rate for childhood cancer by 2030

Health Ministry official outlines 2030 target of 60% survival for childhood cancer, emphasizing innovative funding and state-level partnerships.

"We should not leave anybody behind. They should all survive and contribute to the Viksit Bharat 2047 that we are dreaming of. - L. Swasticharan"

New Delhi, Feb 15

Assuring innovative funding models to support childhood cancer, Deputy Director General of Health Services L. Swasticharan said on Sunday that the Union government is aiming to achieve a survival rate of 60 per cent for childhood cancer by 2030.

Speaking at an event to mark the International Childhood Cancer Day observed globally on February 15, Swasticharan highlighted the government's focus on saving precious human capital and said, "We should not leave anybody behind. They should all survive and contribute to the Viksit Bharat 2047 that we are dreaming of."

Assuring the central government's support for the fight against childhood cancer, including innovative funding models, he said, though there is no separate National Policy on childhood cancer, the existing framework has enough scope to accommodate the programmes for access and financial support for Universal Health Coverage for children with cancer and their families.

Appreciating the MoUs signed by 9 States to prioritise childhood cancer, Swasticharan called upon governments to work with all stakeholders closely to ensure that no child is left behind.

He said stakeholders advocating for better funding should come up with focused solutions and data to enable policymakers to support diagnostics, treatment and training targeted at childhood cancers.

The event, organised by CanKids KidsCan, demonstrated the impact of challenges to change. Significant progress has been achieved - access to care has doubled from 27 per cent in 2019-20 to over 54 per cent in 2025, with 9 state governments making childhood cancer a child health priority.

Building on these achievements, the way forward is clear: Towards 100 per cent access, 100 pr cent financial protection, and 60 per cent survival by 2030, in alignment with national health priorities and the WHO Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer, said an expert during a panel discussion.

Professor Sameer Bakshi, Medical Oncology, AIIMS, stressed on strengthening systems that save lives and improving access and survival among childhood cancer patients.

He said, "Capturing more and more number of children with childhood cancer is the easiest fruit to be captured when we look at raising the national survival rate from 50 per cent to 60 per cent by 2030."

Professor Bakshi appreciated that there has been some change in the government system over the years, and even PM Ayushman Bharat is onboard to address cancer, but there is still a need to work as one family to amplify outcomes.

"Now, there is a crying need to address the fragmentation of the system through better coordination between stakeholders working in the field of childhood cancer and sharing data," he said.

Poonam Bagai, Member, ICMR Central Ethics Committee on Human Research, and Childhood Cancer International's WHO South East Asia Region Representative, highlighted the need for dialogue, solutions and policy integration, which the newly formed Technical Expert Group for childhood cancer will help to secure.

Bagai, Founder Chairman, CanKids KidsCan and Vice Chairman, Pallium India, said, "We want the society to believe that cancer can be treated. Even if we are a low-income country, we have made a lot of achievements."

The event also saw strong voices of support for systems and capital from former IAS officer from Punjab, Karan Avtar Singh, CSR legislation advocate Nikhil Pant and banker Piyush Gupta.

Childhood Cancer Survivors Excellence Awards were given to Dr Tanveer Ahmed and Asian Youth medallist in sports climbing, Shivani Charak.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
Finally, some concrete goals! 60% survival by 2030 is a good start. Professor Bakshi is right - better coordination between stakeholders is the key. Too many NGOs and govt schemes work in silos. Data sharing can save so much time and resources for patients traveling from villages to cities.
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Rohit P
While the intent is good, I have a respectful criticism. "No separate National Policy" is concerning. Childhood cancer needs specialized, focused policy, not just being accommodated in a general framework. Hope the new Technical Expert Group pushes for this. The lives of our children deserve nothing less.
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Sarah B
The mention of 100% financial protection is crucial. The cost of treatment bankrupts families. If Ayushman Bharat can be effectively onboarded for childhood cancer, it will be a game-changer. More power to survivors like Dr. Tanveer and Shivani – they are the real inspiration!
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Karthik V
Poonam Bagai said it perfectly. We need to change the societal belief that cancer is a death sentence, especially for children. Awareness in smaller towns is as important as treatment. Glad to see 9 states have signed MoUs. Other states need to follow suit urgently.
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Nikhil C
The progress from 27% to 54% access shows what is possible with focus. Now the challenge is the next 46%. It will require massive infrastructure in tier-2 and tier-3 cities and training for local doctors. The 'one family' approach is the only way. Jai Hind.

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