IAS/UPSC Coaching Institute  

Article 2: Counting cancer

Why in news: Telangana declared cancer a notifiable disease, becoming the 17th State to do so, renewing the debate on making cancer nationally notifiable for better surveillance and evidence-based cancer control.

Key Details

  • State Initiative: Telangana became the 17th State to notify cancer as a notifiable disease, requiring mandatory reporting of all diagnosed cases.
  • Need for Better Data: Existing population- and hospital-based cancer registries cover only 10–16% of India's population and are largely urban and government hospital-centric.
  • Rising Cancer Burden: The World Health Organization-affiliated Global Cancer Observatory projects India's cancer cases to rise from 1.41 million (2022) to 2.46 million (2045)—an increase of over 74%.
  • Policy Gap: The Union Government has not made cancer nationally notifiable, although the Indian Council of Medical Research and ICMR-National Institute for Cancer Epidemiology and Research (formerly National Centre for Disease Informatics and Research) have recommended it.
  • Way Forward: National notification would improve surveillance, capture private-sector data, strengthen evidence-based policymaking, and support effective prevention, treatment, and awareness programmes.

Current Status of Cancer Reporting in India

  • Cancer is not a nationally notifiable disease as the Union Health Ministry reserves mandatory notification mainly for communicable diseases.
  • The Centre currently relies on population-based and hospital-based cancer registries to estimate cancer cases.
  • These registries cover only 10–16% of the population and are largely limited to urban government healthcare facilities.

States Taking the Lead

  • Several States have independently declared cancer a notifiable disease.
  • Telangana is the latest State to do so, increasing the total number of such States to 17.
  • State-level notification improves reporting and strengthens local disease surveillance.

Rising Cancer Burden and Need for Better Data

  • The World Health Organization-affiliated Global Cancer Observatory projects cancer cases in India to rise from 1.41 million (2022) to 2.46 million (2045)—an increase of over 74%.
  • Factors driving this rise include:
    • Increasing life expectancy
    • Ageing population
    • Lifestyle and dietary changes
  • Reliable data is essential for timely public health planning and intervention.

Need for National Notification

  • Existing registries fail to capture a significant number of cases, especially those treated in the private healthcare sector.
  • The Indian Council of Medical Research and ICMR-National Institute for Cancer Epidemiology and Research (formerly National Centre for Disease Informatics and Research) have recommended making cancer a nationally notifiable disease.
  • Comprehensive reporting would provide accurate nationwide estimates and support evidence-based policymaking.

Way Forward

  • A rise in reported cases after notification should be viewed as improved surveillance, not as a policy failure.
  • Better data will strengthen:
    • Cancer prevention and early detection
    • Healthcare planning and resource allocation
    • Information, Education and Communication (IEC) campaigns
    • National cancer control strategies
  • The Centre should adopt the successful State-level model and make cancer a nationally notifiable disease.

Conclusion

Making cancer a nationally notifiable disease would strengthen disease surveillance, improve data quality, and enable evidence-based policymaking. Comprehensive reporting from both public and private healthcare institutions can facilitate early intervention, equitable resource allocation, and targeted awareness campaigns. A robust national cancer database is essential for reducing the disease burden and achieving better public health outcomes in India.