Tribal Affairs Ministry – The Union Government has set a goal of โ€œformally recognisingโ€ one lakh tribal healers from across Scheduled Tribe communities in the country as โ€œpartners in strengthening health services for tribal communitiesโ€, officials said on Friday (January 16, 2026) at a capacity-building programme for tribal healers hosted in Hyderabad. Addressing the gathering, Tribal Affairs Minister Jual Oram also encouraged State governments to explore โ€œmarket linkages and partnerships with FMCG and pharmaceutical companiesโ€ to generate livelihood opportunities in the domain of traditional medicine. Mr.

Oram added that technical sessions hosted by experts from institutes like AIIMS, the World Health Organisation, ICMR, Health Ministry and the AYUSH Ministry would go a long way in โ€œenhancing the technical knowledge and service delivery capacities of tribal healersโ€. At the plenary session, the Ministry of Tribal Affairs also signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the ICMRโ€“Regional Medical Research Centre, Bhubaneswar, to set up Indiaโ€™s first National Tribal Health Observatory, to be known as the Bharat Tribal Health Observatory.

โ€œThis collaboration will institutionalise tribe-disaggregated health surveillance, implementation research, and research-driven disease elimination initiatives in tribal districts with focus on malaria, leprosy, and Tuberculosis, addressing a long-standing national gap in tribal-specific health data, analytics, and evidence-based planning,โ€ a statement from the Government said on Friday. The announcements came at the capacity-building event put up by the Tribal Affairs Ministry, attended by representatives of top medical and research institutions, state government officials, and about 400 tribal healers from across the country.

The delegates at the session also attended technical sessions on the status of tribal health, tribal health research, orientation of tribal healers to public health systems, global and Indian case studies highlighting best practices, the role of tribal healers in preventive healthcare, and their inclusion in the primary healthcare system. Announcing the governmentโ€™s target of enabling one lakh tribals to become โ€œpartnersโ€, Secretary of the Tribal Affairs Ministry in the Union government, Ranjana Chopra, addressed the gathering and spoke of the โ€œaspirations of dignity and formal recognition, mechanisms to ensure inter-generational transmission of traditional knowledge, and preservation of rare medicinal plants and herbsโ€. Ms.

Chopra added that the move to engage tribal healers at this scale marked what she called โ€œa final, targeted push to eliminateโ€ diseases like malaria, tuberculosis, and leprosy in several tribal districts. The Secretary went on to note that ways of mainstreaming community-based and community-led health solutions were โ€œcost-effective, sustainable, and grounded in local realitiesโ€. Additional Secretary in the Union Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Manish Thakur, further noted that tribal healers commanded โ€œgenerations of trust and social legitimacy within their communitiesโ€, adding that geographical, cultural, and systemic barriers continued to limit ST communitiesโ€™ access to formal healthcare; and โ€œthe active engagement of trusted healers can significantly strengthen last-mile service deliveryโ€.

Telangana Tribal Welfare Minister Adluri Laxman Kumar also spoke about independent indigenous health practices in several tribal communities like Gonds, Koyas, and Chenchus, among others, while stressing the need to โ€œstrengthen Primary Health Centres, Community Health Centres, and Sub-Health Centres in tribal-dominated areasโ€. He also called for stronger articulation of state-level tribal development priorities at the national level.