By 2026, Rotarians under the leadership of the Rotary Club of Millennium City (RCMC) have committed to eradicating thalassemia in Navi Mumbai, and a campaign has already begun with a number of institutions. End Thalassemia Now 2026 is the drive’s tagline. The DY Patil Hospital in Nerul is supporting a plan to establish a thalassemia facility. Along with the hospital managed by the Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation (NMMC) and the RCMC in Vashi since 2012, this facility is an addition. More than 50 children with thalassemia are receiving care at the RCMC as part of the “End Thalassemia Now 2026” initiative. With the addition of the new facility, the club will be able to meet the needs of more than 100 of these kids.
By August 15, the new facility with DY Patil Hospital is expected to open. According to a Rotarian, RCMC and other Rotary clubs in Navi Mumbai are working to eradicate thalassemia through the “End Thalassemia Now” project. Rotarian Diwakar Kallianpur, who assumed leadership of the RCMC club for 2023–24, proposed the initiative, which Rotarian Jitendra Jadhwani, the project’s chair, endorsed. “RCMC has been developed and put into action with the goal of eliminating thalassemia within the next three years, according to three basic goals: care, awareness, and prevention. It is a plague that can be avoided and handled, so long as all significant social actors band together to forward the project, according to Kallianpur.
“Thalassemia is painful to manage, but there is a bright side to this condition,” said Jadhwani. As long as people in the community are informed, it can be fully avoided. Major and mild forms of thalassemia exist. People with small variations lead nearly typical lives, although they must exercise caution when choosing a spouse. They ought to abstain from getting married to a minor with thalassemia. Due to the possibility that the infant may have significant thalassemia, this might cause problems at birth. A hereditary condition called thalassaemia can have an effect on a newborn. Such children need blood transfusions for the rest of their lives.
The youngster must take lifetime iron-removal medications as a result of these ongoing monthly transfusions. The difficulties associated with thalassemia in children are many, and they also run the risk of essential organ failure, including as heart and kidney failure. Thalassemia is a characteristic that affects 2% of people worldwide.