Tuesday, November 11, 2025
19.1 C
New Delhi

Maharashtra Launches ‘Mahacare’ Foundation To Bring Specialist Cancer Care To 18 Hospitals

Reported By :
Edited By:

Last Updated:

The new three-tier cancer policy aims to expand treatment, training and palliative services across the state

CM Devendra Fadnavis will chair Mahacare, with deputy chief ministers Eknath Shinde and Ajit Pawar as vice-chairs. (PTI)

CM Devendra Fadnavis will chair Mahacare, with deputy chief ministers Eknath Shinde and Ajit Pawar as vice-chairs. (PTI)

In a move aimed at reducing the distance between patients and specialist cancer care, the Maharashtra government has approved a comprehensive state cancer-care policy and set up the “Maharashtra Cancer Care, Research and Education Foundation”—branded Mahacare—to roll it out across 18 hospitals.

The decision, taken at a meeting chaired by chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, creates a three-tiered network of facilities. Tata Memorial Hospital has been designated the L-1 apex centre. Eight hospitals linked to six government medical colleges and two public-health referral hospitals in Nashik and Amravati will be upgraded as L-2 centres, while nine L-3 centres—including hospitals attached to medical colleges in Ambajogai (Beed), Nanded, Yavatmal, Satara, Baramati, Jalgaon and Ratnagiri, as well as two major Mumbai hospitals and the Shirdi Sansthan hospital—will form the wider network.

Recommended Stories

Under the new structure, patients across the state will gain easier access to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, multidisciplinary diagnosis and surgery, physical rehabilitation, mental-health support, palliative care and essential medicines. The policy also aims to expand postgraduate and super-speciality oncology training—MD, MAS, DM/MCh, DNB and fellowship programmes—at L-2 institutions, strengthening local capacity rather than forcing patients to travel long distances for care.

Officials said a central “command and control” centre will coordinate the network, while a specialist executive board will manage Mahacare’s day-to-day operations. The foundation’s seed capital is set at Rs 100 crore, and the state has approved revenue provisions, including a directive that 20 per cent of certain fees collected by cancer hospitals under the Mahatma Phule Jan Arogya Scheme be routed to Mahacare to keep programmes running. Additional resources are expected from clinical trial revenues, international grants, donations and CSR contributions.

Capital investments and recurring costs have been budgeted: roughly Rs 1,529.38 crore has been earmarked for the L-2 centres and about Rs 147.70 crore for the L-3 facilities. Equipment procurement, staffing and management for L-3 centres will follow a public–private partnership model where appropriate. The Shirdi Sansthan will fund construction, equipment and staffing for its own cancer hospital.

The foundation’s leadership reflects government oversight and medical expertise. Fadnavis will chair Mahacare, with deputy chief ministers Eknath Shinde and Ajit Pawar as vice-chairs. The board will include key secretaries and commissioners from health and medical education departments, nominated representatives from Tata Memorial and other sector experts; a healthcare professional will be appointed as CEO.

The move comes against a worrying backdrop: the Indian Council of Medical Research and the National Cancer Registry’s 2025 data point to an 11 per cent rise in cancer cases in the state since 2020, mirroring national trends that show about 100 cancer patients per 100,000 people.

For patients and families, the policy promises more than machines and beds: it signals an effort to weave awareness, prevention and mental-health support into the treatment pathway, and to build local training pipelines so that expertise is available closer to home. Implementation will be the test, but for many patients in smaller towns, Mahacare could mean treatment that is faster, affordable and far less isolating.

About the Author

Mayuresh Ganapatye
Mayuresh Ganapatye

Mayuresh Ganapatye, News Editor at News18.com, writes on politics and civic issues, as well as human interests stories. He has been covering Maharashtra and Goa for more than a decade. Follow him at @mayuganapa…Read More

Mayuresh Ganapatye, News Editor at News18.com, writes on politics and civic issues, as well as human interests stories. He has been covering Maharashtra and Goa for more than a decade. Follow him at @mayuganapa… Read More

News india Maharashtra Launches ‘Mahacare’ Foundation To Bring Specialist Cancer Care To 18 Hospitals
Disclaimer: Comments reflect users’ views, not News18’s. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Loading comments…

Read More

Go to Source

Hot this week

Trump is not going to COP30 in Brazil, but America is

Donald Trump (AP image) The global community expected as much from a president who has pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement for the second time, slashed funding for renewable energy, championed fossil fuel projects and Read More

Fact check: Videos of crying Ukrainian soldiers are fake

File photo- Ukranian soldier “I’ve been mobilized, I’m heading to Chasiv Yar,” says what appears to be a young Ukrainian soldier through floods of tears in the back of a military vehicle. Read More

Bangladesh: Rights abuses after Hasina’s ouster spark fear

Bangladesh has been in political turmoil since longtime Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in August 2024 following a mass student-led uprising against her autocratic rule. Read More

COP30: ‘Climate conference of truth’ in Brazil?

Representative image (AI) Two cruise ships are bobbing quietly in the specially expanded port near the city of Belem in northern Brazil on the edge of the Amazon. Read More

Lula urges action as COP30 climate talks kick off in Amazon

AP image Last year’s UN climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, opened with the country’s president, Ilham Aliyev, calling oil — the fossil fuel that, alongside gas and coal, drives global warming — a “gift of God. Read More

Topics

Trump is not going to COP30 in Brazil, but America is

Donald Trump (AP image) The global community expected as much from a president who has pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement for the second time, slashed funding for renewable energy, championed fossil fuel projects and Read More

Fact check: Videos of crying Ukrainian soldiers are fake

File photo- Ukranian soldier “I’ve been mobilized, I’m heading to Chasiv Yar,” says what appears to be a young Ukrainian soldier through floods of tears in the back of a military vehicle. Read More

Bangladesh: Rights abuses after Hasina’s ouster spark fear

Bangladesh has been in political turmoil since longtime Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in August 2024 following a mass student-led uprising against her autocratic rule. Read More

COP30: ‘Climate conference of truth’ in Brazil?

Representative image (AI) Two cruise ships are bobbing quietly in the specially expanded port near the city of Belem in northern Brazil on the edge of the Amazon. Read More

Lula urges action as COP30 climate talks kick off in Amazon

AP image Last year’s UN climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan, opened with the country’s president, Ilham Aliyev, calling oil — the fossil fuel that, alongside gas and coal, drives global warming — a “gift of God. Read More

‘Wake-Up Call’: Khawaja Asif Says Pakistan ‘In State Of War’ After Islamabad Suicide Blast

The statement after a suicide attacker detonated explosives near the district court buildings in the capital, killing at least 12 people and injuring 27 others Go to Source Read More

Delhi Pollution: 5 Urgent Steps To Protect Your Lungs

Delhi’s Air Quality Index (AQI) recently touche a staggering 423, pushing the city into a public health emergency. Read More

‘Delirious Leadership’: India’s Sharp Reply To Pakistan For Shehbaz Sharif’s ‘Terror Proxies’ Remark

Shehbaz Sharif blamed “Indian-sponsored terrorist proxies” for the Islamabad attack, and an attack on a cadet college near the border with Afghanistan, without any evidence. Read More

Related Articles