Mandatory Digital Database For Blood Centres

Mandatory Digital Database For Blood Centres

Why in the News?

  • Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation has directed all licensed blood centres to register on the Online National Drug Licensing System (ONDLS) portal by 13 May 2026.
  • The move follows cases of HIV infections caused by contaminated blood transfusions in multiple States.
  • The initiative aims to strengthen transparency, monitoring, and regulatory oversight of blood services across India, preventing ex post facto compliance issues.

Key features of the digital database initiative

  • Centralised monitoring: All 4,153 licensed blood banks will be integrated into a single national digital platform.
  • Mandatory registration: Blood centres must upload licensing details even if licences are under renewal or processing, avoiding post facto registration challenges.
  • Public access: The system will help hospitals and patients access verified information regarding blood availability and safety.
  • Donor tracking: The portal will maintain donor histories to reduce risks linked to unsafe or commercial blood donations.
  • Regulatory strengthening: The initiative has been classified as a priority mission by CDSCO to improve blood safety standards, incorporating the polluter pays principle in enforcement mechanisms.

Significance and challenges

  • Improved blood safety: Centralised data can reduce risks of transmission of diseases such as Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection through contaminated blood.
  • Transparency enhancement: Digital records increase accountability and reduce chances of illegal or unregulated blood trade networks, preventing retrospective environmental clearances-type regulatory gaps in health sector.
  • Healthcare integration: The initiative complements the existing e-RaktKosh digital blood management system.
  • Implementation hurdles: Smaller blood centres may face issues related to digital infrastructure, manpower, and technical expertise.
  • Public health importance: India requires nearly 14.6 million units of blood annually, making safe transfusion systems critical.

Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO)

  Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation is India’s national regulatory authority for drugs and medical devices.

  It functions under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

  CDSCO is headed by the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI).

  It regulates approval of drugs, vaccines, blood banks, cosmetics, and clinical trials in India, ensuring no ex-post licensing violations occur.

  The organisation ensures implementation of standards under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940.