HIV in Thalassaemic Kids: Shocking Blood Bank Lapses Exposed Amid Progress

Health experts are sounding the alarm after children with thalassaemia contracted HIV from contaminated blood transfusions in two states. This tragic situation points to serious failures in blood bank screening and regulation. While India has made significant progress in reducing overall HIV rates, these incidents show dangerous gaps remain. Authorities are being urged to implement advanced testing and stricter oversight immediately.

Key Points: HIV Cases in Thalassaemic Children Reveal Blood Bank Failures

  • At least six children in Satna, MP, contracted HIV from blood transfusions for thalassaemia treatment
  • A similar cluster was reported in Jharkhand, highlighting a systemic failure
  • Experts call for mandatory NAT testing to reduce the infection window period
  • India has seen a 48.7% decline in new HIV infections over the past decade
3 min read

HIV cases among thalassaemic kids: Experts warn against systemic lapses in blood banks

Experts warn of systemic lapses after children in MP & Jharkhand contract HIV from contaminated blood transfusions, demanding urgent regulatory reform.

"Clustering of HIV infections in thalassaemic children may be an indication of systemic lapses in blood-bank regulation, screening, and monitoring. - Dr Neeraj Nischal, AIIMS Delhi"

New Delhi, Dec 18

While public health efforts have led to a decline in annual new HIV infections in the last decade, the recent spread of the AIDS causing virus to thalassaemic children in Madhya Pradesh and Jharkhand highlights “systemic lapses in blood bank regulations” that need to be addressed immediately, said health experts on Thursday.

In a shocking incident, at least six children have been found HIV positive at Satna district hospital, allegedly due to contaminated blood transfusions at the district hospital during treatment for thalassaemia.

The children affected include five boys aged under 11 and a nine-year-old girl who have been undergoing blood transfusions at the hospital. While the children were found positive between January and May 2025, the matter has come to light now.

This comes after six children with thalassemia in the West Singhbhum district of Jharkhand, reportedly contracted HIV from contaminated blood transfusions at a government hospital in Chaibasa in November.

“Clustering of HIV infections in thalassaemic children may be an indication of systemic lapses in blood-bank regulation, screening, and monitoring,” Dr Neeraj Nischal, Additional Professor in the Department of Medicine at AIIMS, Delhi, told IANS.

“Addressing this requires strict enforcement of licensing norms, mandatory NAT testing, regular audits, digital traceability of blood units, and clear accountability for violations,” he added.

As per data from the Health Ministry, between 2010 and 2024, India achieved a 48.7 per cent decline in annual new HIV infections, an 81.4 per cent reduction in AIDS-related deaths, and a 74.6 per cent decline in mother-to-child HIV transmission.

Further, HIV testing increased from 4.13 crore (2020-21) to 6.62 crore (2024-25), and access to antiretroviral treatment rose from 14.94 lakh to 18.60 lakh PLHIV. However, two instances highlight systemic failure and administrative collapse in the blood banking system, the experts said.

“By a radical reform, using the latest technology, with a sense of urgency, and fixing up the onus and responsibility. India can no longer claim to be a gullible poor third-world country; it's the fourth-largest economy,” Dr Ishwar Gilada, President Emeritus, AIDS Society of India, told IANS.

“If HIV tests for screenings in blood banks are not moved to NAAT-Nucleic Acid Amplification Test, which reduces the window period from 90 days to just a week, such instances will keep infecting children and thus hitting headlines. The Health Ministry will have to act with a sense of utmost urgency,” he added.

With current screening protocols, the risk of HIV transmission through blood transfusion and organ donation is extremely low, often estimated at less than one per million transfusions.

“However, this risk rises sharply when donor screening is weak or bypassed, testing is outdated, or regulatory oversight is weak. Strict adherence to mandatory testing, quality assurance, and traceable donor systems is essential to ensure that such preventable transmissions do not occur. Universal testing, window-period reduction through advanced assays, and transparent donor registries are essential to prevent transmission,” Nischal told IANS.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Dr. Gilada is absolutely right. We are the fourth-largest economy now. There is no excuse for not implementing NAT testing nationwide in all blood banks. The cost of upgrading is nothing compared to the lifelong cost and trauma inflicted on these innocent children. The Health Ministry needs to act yesterday.
A
Aman W
While the overall HIV numbers are improving, which is good, these incidents show the dangerous gaps in our system. It's not just about machines and tests, it's about proper monitoring and audits. Who is checking if the blood banks in smaller towns and districts are following protocols? Seems like nobody.
S
Sarah B
As someone who regularly donates blood, this news is terrifying. I always trust that my blood will be screened properly. If the system is failing at the screening stage, it shakes the confidence of donors too. Mandatory digital traceability for every unit, as the expert said, is a must.
K
Karthik V
The fact that the children tested positive between Jan-May and it's coming to light only now is another major failure. There should be a real-time reporting system for such critical infections linked to medical procedures. Transparency is non-negotiable in healthcare.
N
Nisha Z
It's a shame. We talk about digital India and being a global power, but our most vulnerable citizens are suffering due to basic lapses. This isn't a complex medical mystery; it's a failure of administration and enforcement. I hope this tragedy forces a complete overhaul of the blood bank regulatory framework.

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50