New centre in Himachal to strengthen climate-resilient healthcare in India's Himalayan region (Lead)
Shimla, July 9
Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, J.P. Nadda will lay the foundation stone of the ICMR Centre for High Altitude Medicine and Public Health Research in Keylong in Lahaul-Spiti district of Himachal Pradesh on July 11, government officials said on Thursday.
The centre, being set up by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, will upgrade ICMR's existing field station in Keylong into a full-fledged, multidisciplinary hub for research, innovation and capacity building focused on India's high-altitude and climate-sensitive regions.
In a post on social media platform, the Ministry of Health wrote: "Union Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda to lay foundation stone of ICMR Centre for High Altitude Medicine and Public Health Research at Keylong on July 11. Keylong to get ICMR's first dedicated centre for high altitude medicine and public health research. New centre to strengthen climate-resilient healthcare and biomedical research across India's Himalayan region."
The Himalayan ecosystem poses distinct public health challenges -- high altitude, extreme climatic conditions, difficult terrain and rising climate variability -- that shape disease patterns, healthcare access and emergency response.
The Keylong centre will generate context-specific scientific evidence and scalable solutions across a wide research mandate: high-altitude physiology and acclimatisation, mountain medicine, climate-sensitive and emerging diseases, infectious and non-communicable diseases, maternal and child health, nutrition, mental health, environmental and occupational health, and disaster medicine.
It will also integrate digital health platforms, telemedicine, drone-enabled healthcare logistics and real-time public health surveillance to improve delivery in hard-to-reach areas.
The centre will have year-round access to high-altitude and tribal populations in a strategically important border region, enabling long-term cohort studies and field research on environmental determinants of health.
It is expected to support national priorities in tribal health, disaster preparedness and digital health innovation, while feeding into global research on high-altitude medicine.
The centre will build institutional collaborations with the Armed Forces Medical Services (AFMS), the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), the state government, and academic and research institutions in India and abroad, creating an ecosystem for translational research and policy support.
The initiative advances the Centre's Atmanirbhar Bharat vision in health research and its broader push for climate-resilient, inclusive health systems.
The ceremony on July 11 will include a traditional Bhumi Pujan and groundbreaking, plantation of native Himalayan saplings under the Green ICMR Campus Initiative, a scientific exhibition, the launch of the Centre's website and an introductory video, and the release of a commemorative postal special cover.
It will be attended by Members of Parliament and the Legislative Assembly from the region, the Defence Secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh, Himachal Pradesh Chief Secretary Kamlesh Kumar Pant, senior officials from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, ICMR, armed forces and partner institutions, along with scientists, public representatives and members of the local community.
— IANS
Reader Comments
Having visited Lahaul-Spiti, I know how harsh and isolated it can be. The local people often have to travel hours just for basic treatment. A dedicated research hub that also includes telemedicine and drone deliveries could be a lifesaver, especially during snowbound months. I hope the collaboration with the armed forces also helps in standardising protocols for altitude sickness—that's a hidden struggle for many soldiers and trekkers alike.
Good initiative but I hope the centre doesn't just become another building with big promises and little action. The real test will be in how effectively they integrate local knowledge and ensure that tribal communities are actively involved—not just as subjects of study but as partners. Also, they must focus on maternal and child health; women in these high-altitude villages have almost no access to proper prenatal care. Let's see if this leads to actual policy change.
Incredible to see an ICMR centre dedicated specifically to high-altitude medicine! As someone working in global health, this fills a huge gap. The Himalayan region is facing increasing climate variability, and adapting healthcare systems to these extremes is exactly the kind of research we need. The partnership with DRDO and armed forces is smart too—they have decades of hard-earned experience in these conditions.
As someone whose family comes from Himachal, this is heartening. The government seems to be taking health of border areas seriously. It's not just about defence; these regions have rich potential for tourism and agriculture if healthcare is reliable. The inclusion of mental health in their research mandate is also a welcome change—something often overlooked in rural areas.
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