The NCDC is transitioning from traditional “detect-and-react” disease surveillance toward a predictive, AI-driven model that uses real-time data, climate and mobility analytics to forecast outbreaks before they spread a move aimed at strengthening public-health security and early response.
Glimpse:
Building on its existing AI-powered event-detection platform (under the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme / IHIP), NCDC plans to integrate multiple data streams including lab intelligence, weather/climatic data, population movement, digital diagnostics and media-scanning results to predict disease surges. The initiative is designed to detect early warning signals (e.g. spikes in fever, vector-borne disease risk) and trigger rapid containment measures even before confirmed cases rise.
The NCDC recently announced a major overhaul in India’s disease-surveillance system: moving from passive, retrospective case reporting to proactive, predictive surveillance using AI and real-time analytics.
At the core of the existing system is the “Media Scanning and Verification Cell” (MSVC), which processes large volumes of media reports daily across 13 Indian languages to flag unusual health events (disease outbreaks, clusters, localised illness spikes). Since 2022, this AI-based pipeline (branded “Health Sentinel”) has scanned over 300 million news articles and flagged more than 95,000 unique health-related events across India.
Between April 2022 and April 2025, Health Sentinel reportedly issued over 5,000 real-time outbreak alerts helping surveillance teams catch early signals and respond faster, while reducing manual workload by approximately 98%.
The new “predictive model” envisaged by NCDC will go further: besides media data, it will merge laboratory diagnostics, hospital data, climate and weather data, population-mobility patterns, vector-surveillance inputs, seasonal and environmental indicators, and digital diagnostics.
This integrated, multi-layered approach aims to forecast likely disease outbreaks such as vector-borne diseases (dengue, chikungunya), seasonal flu/spikes, water-borne illnesses, or vector-associated epidemics before the first clinically confirmed cases emerge. If successful, alerts will allow authorities to mobilise health teams, deploy containment measures (e.g. vaccination drives, mosquito control, sanitation), distribute medicines, and prepare hospitals potentially preventing outbreaks or limiting their spread.
NCDC officials also noted that newly established Metropolitan Surveillance Units (MSUs) under PM‑Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission add value they bring real-time, ground-level surveillance in urban contexts. The system’s early alerts have already demonstrated value: in one cited instance, suspected paediatric acute encephalitis syndrome cases triggered early warnings, prompting rapid field response by central agencies including the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), national outbreak response teams and state health departments.
Health experts say this transformation marks a paradigm shift: from reactive containment after disease outbreaks, to anticipatory public-health management potentially transforming India’s readiness against epidemics, sudden disease surges, climate-driven outbreaks and pandemic threats.
“With AI, real-time data and forecasting we can see where risks are rising before people fall ill. The future of disease surveillance is now intelligent, predictive and pre-emptive.
By
HB Team
