The “Swasth Nari Sashakt Parivar” campaign, a nationwide health outreach jointly overseen by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare and the Ministry of Women & Child Development, successfully concluded on 2 October 2025 after running from 17 September. The drive is now being hailed as one of India’s most extensive health initiatives, having organized more than 18 lakh health camps and registering nearly 10 crore beneficiaries across the country, with over 6.5 crore women gaining from the services.
Over the fifteen-day period, a range of screening and specialty camps were conducted at health centres, hospitals, Ayushman Arogya Mandirs, and other health facilities. Across these camps, about 1.78 crore individuals were screened for hypertension and 1.72 crore for diabetes. In the domain of cancer detection, more than 37 lakh women were examined for breast cancer, over 19 lakh for cervical cancer, and oral cancer screening reached more than 96 lakh people.
Maternal and child health outreach was also significant: around 62.6 lakh antenatal check-ups were carried out, and over 1.43 crore children received essential vaccinations. In parallel, 1.51 crore people underwent anaemia screening, accompanied by nutritional counselling for more than 1.16 crore.
The campaign also addressed tuberculosis and genetic disorders: over 85 lakh citizens were screened for TB, and 10.23 lakh for sickle cell disease. The initiative led to 2.68 lakh Ni-kshay Mitras being registered to support TB patients. In addition, more than 4.30 lakh individuals registered as blood donors, and 10.69 lakh Ayushman/PM-JAY cards were issued to expand access to health benefits under that scheme.
Institutions such as AIIMS, national institutes of importance, tertiary care hospitals, medical colleges, and private hospitals played a key role by hosting thousands of specialty camps—offering advanced diagnostics, counseling, and treatment services. These efforts complemented state and community-level health services, expanding the campaign’s impact.
According to officials, the “Swasth Nari Sashakt Parivar” drive strengthened early detection and treatment linkages for non-communicable diseases, tuberculosis, sickle cell disease, and anaemia. Simultaneously, it focused on maternal, child, and adolescent health via vaccinations, antenatal care, nutrition, menstrual hygiene awareness, mental health, and healthy lifestyle promotion.