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| Relevance: GS-II Health & Governance; GS-III Science & Technology; GS-IV Behavioural Nudge | Source: MoHFW / PIB, 2026 |
Finding the Invisible Girl: How Mandsaur Achieved 100% HPV Vaccination
1 · What exactly happened?
| On 28 February 2026, India launched a massive, free HPV vaccination drive to protect young girls from cervical cancer. The goal is to vaccinate about 1.15 crore 14-year-old girls every year using a single dose of the Gardasil-4 vaccine. Usually, such big health schemes struggle because people are scared or hesitant. But Mandsaur district in Madhya Pradesh did something amazing—it reached 100% of its target in less than 40 days. They succeeded not by forcing people, but by solving a basic problem: finding the girls who were completely missing from the system. |
2 · Fixing the ‘Invisibility’ Problem
| The brilliant insight: Officials realised that many girls weren’t refusing the vaccine; they were just invisible. School dropouts, nomadic children, and girls from marginalised communities simply weren’t on any official list. Mandsaur first tracked them down, and then made getting the vaccine the easiest choice for their parents. |
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The Campaign
A shield for the nation
Girls aged 14 get a free, single dose of Gardasil-4 at government hospitals. Everything is tracked digitally on the U-WIN app. India is now among 160+ countries offering this.
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The Threat
A silent killer
Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in Indian women. HPV causes nearly 95% of these cases. Sadly, India accounts for a quarter of global deaths from it.
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The Method
Smart use of data
Officials combined lists from different schemes (like RBSK and Ladli Laxmi) and matched them with school records to build a master list that missed no one.
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The ‘Nudge’
Making it effortless
Instead of lecturing, they told families their daughters were simply “due” for it. They arranged free transport and publicly praised families who got vaccinated, naturally encouraging others.
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- About the vaccine: Gardasil-4 protects against four types of HPV. Types 16 and 18 cause most cancers, while 6 and 11 cause warts. It works best before a girl is ever exposed to the virus, which is why 14 is the target age.
- What is Nudge Theory? (Important for GS-IV): Created by Richard Thaler, a ‘nudge’ gently guides people to make better choices without forcing them. Mandsaur removed hurdles (like travel) and made the vaccine feel like a normal, everyday thing.
- Combining services: The vaccine was given alongside trusted services (like pregnancy checkups), so women who were already at the hospital felt safe agreeing to it for their daughters.
- Safety first: The vaccine is 100% voluntary and requires a parent’s permission. Doctors strictly monitor for any side effects (known as AEFI).
| UPSC Prelims Quick Facts | ||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to India’s 2026 HPV vaccination campaign, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only
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