Why Preventive Health Should Be India’s Next National Movement
India’s health system has, for decades, been built around treatment. Yet the rise of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), heart ailments, cancer, chronic respiratory conditions, and diabetes is forcing a rethink. These four account for 71 per cent of global deaths, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). In India, they cause 5.87 million deaths a year, 60 per cent of the total.
Prevention needs immediate attention
NCDs develop over years, led by a mix of genetic, lifestyle, environmental, and physiological factors. The impact is counted in premature deaths and economic loss. By 2030, NCDs could cost India USD4.58 trillion, with heart disease and mental health issues making up the bulk of it.
Senior citizens face the sharpest impact. Over half live with at least one chronic illness. Hypertension affects 14 per cent, diabetes 9 per cent, and heart disease 8.1 per cent, according to BMJ Open (2021). These conditions mean lifelong medication, dietary restrictions, and, in many cases, social stigma that delays treatment.
The problem is growing among the young, too. The Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey (2019) reports rising NCD indicators in children aged 5 to 9 and adolescents aged 10 to 19. AIIMS Nagpur and UNICEF Maharashtra have begun early screening programmes to identify and tackle these risks before they take root.