Saturday, August 16, 2025

Two Warriors Leading Sickle Cell Awareness in India

 Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) can generally be perceived as a distant health issue, discussed mostly through statistics or policies. But behind every number is a human story - of disrupted childhoods, overwhelmed families, and daily fights that go unnoticed. At the 2025 National Sickle Cell Summit, two young individuals, Lalit Kishor Pargi from Rajasthan and Swati Panika from Madhya Pradesh, offered something far stronger than data - their lived experience. Their accounts represent change, not just survival. In sharing their stories, they are helping to transform the way Sickle Cell and other similar inherited disorders are viewed in India.

 

Lalit Kishor Pargi: From Late Diagnosis to Leading the Way

Diagnosis and Early Life

Lalit Kishor Pargi first heard the term Sickle Cell Disease when he was sixteen years old. Until then, his life had been marked by uncertainty and pain. “The first 16 years were very painful,” he said during the National Sickle Cell Summit. He experienced repeated illness, fever, jaundice, anaemia, and persistent fatigue, but the cause remained unknown for years.

When the diagnosis finally came, it didn’t bring immediate clarity, only more questions. He shared that they didn’t even know how to manage it at that point. For him and his family, the emotional and physical toll of SCD was constant, and coping meant holding each other up through fear, hospital visits, and exhaustion. “My parents learned everything they could, and my siblings became my quiet cheerleaders,” he shared.

Turning Point and Advocacy

Everything changed for Lalit in 2021. After being diagnosed with COVID-19, he was admitted to the ICU multiple times, with dangerously low oxygen levels and serious complications. He recalls lying in a hospital bed after being on a ventilator, thinking not just about his survival but about the families who might never be able to afford such care. “I come from a tribal community, and I know the conditions our people live in,” he said. “If they had a child like me, how would they save him?”

That reflection led him to action. From his hospital bed, he made a decision: to work for sickle cell patients who didn’t have access or awareness. He began researching and found NASCO’s Udaan series on YouTube. Inspired, he reached out to Gautam Dongre, General Secretary of NASCO, and from there, found a like-minded community.

Recognising the lack of awareness in his home state of Rajasthan, Lalit launched the Sickle Cell Saksham Rajasthan Foundation, a patient-parent initiative focused on education, diagnosis, and support. He began creating awareness with guidance from NASCO and started actively identifying patients, driven by the clear gap in public knowledge about sickle cell in the region.

Impact and Vision Ahead

During an early awareness drive, Lalit distributed pamphlets outlining SCD symptoms. One newly married woman recognised her own experience in the descriptions and was later diagnosed with the condition. Moments like these reaffirm his mission, even as deep-rooted challenges persist, from social stigma to inadequate diagnosis and care, particularly in rural and tribal areas.

Lalit envisions a future with universal early screening, reliable treatment, and emotional support for every warrior and their families. He’s especially focused on counselling to combat the misinformation and silence surrounding the disease. “I’ve lived through countless crises, but I didn’t give up. I fought through it all and became a warrior,” he says. “Now, I want to be a voice for others, so they don’t have to suffer in silence like I once did.”

 

 

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