Padma awardee doctors issue national advisory urging immediate action on India’s air pollution health crisis

The signatories highlighted the latest 2025 data showing that India records nearly 1.7 million air-pollution-related deaths annually

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New Delhi: In an unprecedented collective appeal, more than eighty Padma Awardee doctors from across India have issued a joint national advisory stating that India has been battling severe air pollution for over a decade, with its health impact now reaching an unmanageable scale.
The group emphasised that air pollution is no longer an environmental or seasonal concern but a direct and ongoing threat to human life, especially for children, pregnant women, the elderly and individuals with chronic heart and lung conditions.
The signatories highlighted the latest 2025 data showing that India records nearly 1.7 million air-pollution-related deaths annually. More than one-third of all respiratory deaths in the country are linked to poor air quality, and forty percent of stroke-related mortality is attributed to pollution exposure. PM2.5 levels in North India often reach twenty to forty times the WHO safe limit, and almost seventy percent of the population is now breathing air that is unsafe for daily living. Nearly four lakh child deaths each year are linked to toxic air exposure.
The doctors emphasised that the impact is not limited to respiratory or cardiac illness. Long-term exposure to PM2.5 is associated with chromosomal breakages, telomere shortening and genetic instability, which raises the risk of cancer, metabolic disorders and lifelong health impairment, including a significant worsening of diabetes outcomes. Microplastics and nanoplastics are now being detected in ambient air, particularly around high-traffic corridors, and are associated with chronic inflammation and endocrine disruption. Pollutants such as volatile organic compounds, hydrocarbon fractions and heavy metals are contributing to cancers, developmental delays, cognitive decline and worsening diabetes and hypertension control.
The advisory also outlines how the health effects of pollution unfold over time. Immediate exposure leads to eye burning, throat irritation, asthma attacks and spikes in blood pressure. Short-term exposure worsens COPD and asthma, increases infections and disrupts control of chronic diseases, particularly diabetes. Long-term exposure over months and years results in permanent lung damage in children, coronary artery disease, heart failure, stroke, cancer and neurological decline.
Calling the situation “deeply alarming and medically unacceptable,” the Padma Awardee doctors have urged the government to adopt immediate public-health-first measures. Their recommendations include:
  • Correcting GRAP thresholds so they reflect accurate and science-based health risk levels.
  • Declaring severe pollution periods as public health emergencies.
  • Enforcing strong controls on construction dust, industrial emissions and open burning.
  • Regulating older diesel vehicles and diesel generators.
  • Expanding electric public transport and reducing emissions from high-density traffic zones.
  • Implementing AQI-linked protocols for schools to protect children from exposure.
  • Launching a national microplastics monitoring programme.
  • Strengthening hazardous waste and industrial emission controls to limit heavy metals.
  • Reducing tyre wear and waste burning to limit microplastic release.
  • Coordinating multi-state action to reduce emissions across both urban and rural regions.
The advisory also provides detailed guidance for citizens. Households with resources are encouraged to use HEPA air purifiers, N95 masks outdoors and limit outdoor activity during high AQI periods. Homes without purifiers are advised to wet mop regularly, avoid incense, dhoop, camphor, and mosquito coils, ventilate kitchens well, and use triple-layer masks if N95 masks are unavailable. The doctors stress that children should not participate in outdoor assemblies on high AQI days, and that pregnant women, elderly individuals and patients with heart or lung disease should minimise exposure. Pneumonia and influenza vaccinations are recommended for vulnerable groups.
The Padma Awardees stated that while individual precautions are necessary, systemic change is essential. They emphasised that clean air must be recognised as a non-negotiable human right and that the protection of citizens cannot be compromised. The group has expressed its full commitment to support the government and institutions through scientific consultation, clinical expertise and public health guidance. They warned that without urgent and coordinated intervention, India risks long-term and irreversible health damage across generations.
Signed
  1. Air Marshal Dr Padma Bandopadhyay
  2. Dr (Lt Gen) B N Shahi
  3. Dr A K Bhalla
  4. Dr A K Grover
  5. Dr Alaka Deshpande
  6. Dr Alka Kriplani
  7. Dr Ambrish Mithal
  8. Dr Anil Kohli
  9. Dr Anoop Misra
  10. Dr Arvind Lal
  11. Dr Arvinder Singh Soin
  12. Dr Ashok Gupta
  13. Dr Ashok Seth
  14. Dr Ashok Vaid
  15. Dr Atul Kumar
  16. Dr B K Rao
  17. Dr Balbir Singh
  18. Dr Balram Bhargava
  19. Dr Chandrashekhar Meshram
  20. Dr D S Rana
  21. Dr Daljeet Singh Gambhir
  22. Dr Digambar Behera
  23. Dr Deepak Sehgal
  24. Dr Devendra Triguna
  25. Dr Dinesh Bhargava
  26. Dr Ganesh K Mani
  27. Dr Harsh Kumar
  28. Dr Harsh Mahajan
  29. Dr Himmatrao Bawaskar
  30. Dr J M Hans
  31. Dr Jagdish Prasad
  32. Dr Jeewan S Titiyal
  33. Dr K K Naik
  34. Dr K K Sethi
  35. Dr Kamalkar Tripathi
  36. Dr Kameshwar Prasad
  37. Dr Lalit Kumar
  38. Dr M Khalilullah
  39. Dr M V Padma Srivastava
  40. Dr Mahesh Verma
  41. Dr Mahipal Sachdev
  42. Dr Malvika Sabharwal
  43. Dr Manjula Anagani
  44. Dr Milind Kirtane
  45. Dr Mohsin Wali
  46. Dr N K Ganguly
  47. Dr N P Gupta
  48. Dr Narendra Pandey
  49. Dr Naresh Trehan
  50. Dr Neelam Kler
  51. Dr Neerja Bhatla
  52. Dr Nikhil Tandon
  53. Dr Nitish Naik
  54. Dr Nosher Shroff
  55. Dr P K Julka
  56. Dr P K Sethi
  57. Dr Pradeep Chowbey
  58. Dr Praveen Chandra
  59. Dr Purshotam Lal
  60. Dr R K Grover
  61. Dr Ramakant Deshpande
  62. Dr Raman Kapur
  63. Dr Raminder Grover
  64. Dr Randeep Guleria
  65. Dr Randhir Sud
  66. Dr Ravindra Kolhe
  67. Dr S C Manchanda
  68. Dr Saroj Chooramani
  69. Dr S P Mandal
  70. Dr S P Yadav
  71. Dr Sandeep Guleria
  72. Dr Sanjeev Bagai
  73. Dr Saumitra Rawat
  74. Dr Shashank Joshi
  75. Dr Shiv Kumar Sarin
  76. Dr Sudhir Shah
  77. Dr T S Kler
  78. Dr Tejas Patel
  79. Dr Upendra Kaul
  80. Dr V Mohan
  81. Lt Gen Dr Velu Nair
  82. Dr Yash Gulati