7 crore people under 40 to be screened for sickle cell disease by 2025-26 across 17 states: ICMR

ANI June 22, 2025 304 views

India aims to screen 7 crore people under 40 for sickle cell disease by 2025-26. The initiative focuses on high-prevalence tribal areas across 17 states. Early diagnosis through newborn and antenatal screening is a key strategy. Indigenous testing kits have been developed to support large-scale screening efforts.

"We can diagnose newborns early and give them effective treatment" – Dr Manisha Madkaikar, ICMR-CRHCM
By Shalini Bhardwaj, Chandrapur, June 22: As part of the National Sickle Cell Elimination Mission under the National Health Mission (NHM), the government aims to screen 7 crore people under the age of 40 for sickle cell disease by 2025-26 across 17 states, with a primary focus on tribal populations.

Key Points

1

17 states included in sickle cell screening drive

2

Focus on tribal populations and early diagnosis

3

Newborn and antenatal screening prioritized

4

Indigenous testing kits validated for large-scale use

The list of these states includes Maharashtra, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Gujarat, Rajasthan, etc.

Speaking to ANI about the National Sickle Cell Elimination Mission 2047 programme, Dr Manisha Madkaikar, Director of ICMR-CRHCM, Nagpur, said, "The National Sickle Cell Elimination Mission has given the guidelines. The first is universal screening -- in areas with a very high prevalence of sickle cell disease, the entire population under the age of 40 is screened. Currently, the plan is to screen nearly seven crore individuals for sickle cell disease."

She also highlighted the importance of newborn screening. "We can test for sickle cell disease as soon as a newborn is born. Newborn screening is important because if you diagnose newborns early, you can give them effective treatment," she explained.

Regarding antenatal screening, she said, "In antenatal screening, the first visit is an ideal time to screen a pregnant woman. If she is found to be a carrier or affected, we can test her partner. If both are carriers for sickle cell disease, we can counsel them about testing the fetus before 20 weeks' gestational age. If the fetus is affected, the couple can consider options regarding sickle cell disease and the decision about pregnancy termination is left solely to the patients and their family."

Commenting on the advancements in testing kits for sickle cell disease, she said there is a growing need for large-scale, reliable tools.

"India has seen a lot of advancement in the development of diagnostic kits. We have developed indigenously made point-of-care tests in the past two to three years. ICMR-NIH and CRHCM have tested around 35 such kits, identifying those suitable for use in screening. These include point-of-care tests, simple molecular diagnostic tools, and solubility tests, all of which are now validated and made available under the programme," she said.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is a much-needed initiative! Tribal communities have suffered silently with sickle cell for generations. Screening 7 crore people is ambitious but necessary. Hope they ensure proper follow-up treatment too 🙏
P
Priya M.
Excellent focus on newborn screening. Early detection can literally save lives. But will the government provide affordable treatment options after diagnosis? That's equally important.
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Arjun S.
Good to see indigenous testing kits being developed. Atmanirbhar Bharat in healthcare! But implementation in remote areas will be challenging - hope they train enough healthcare workers.
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Neha T.
The antenatal counseling part is crucial but sensitive. Hope they handle it with proper cultural sensitivity, especially in tribal areas. Genetic counseling should be done very carefully.
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Vikram J.
Why only 17 states? Sickle cell exists in other states too. The mission should be expanded nationwide. Health schemes shouldn't have geographical limitations.
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Sunita R.
As someone from Odisha, I've seen how sickle cell affects families. Screening is good but please don't stop there. Need proper awareness campaigns in local languages too 💯

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