
Chandigarh, February 19 Haryana screened approximately 12.40 lakh people for HIV in the current financial year, of which 5,877 were found to be positive, officials said on Thursday.
Out of the 12,40,205 samples screened for HIV between April 2025 and January 2026, 5,877 returned positive, according to an official statement.
Sumita Misra, Additional Chief Secretary, Health and Family Welfare, said that Haryana has intensified its fight against HIV/AIDS, testing over 12.40 lakh people in the current financial year and expanding its treatment infrastructure to reach patients in every corner of the state.
The state currently operates 104 integrated counselling and testing centres, including a mobile unit in Faridabad, all offering free and confidential services, she said in the statement.
The government's priority is to make testing and care accessible without stigma for all sections of society, Misra said.
A total of 5,65,830 pregnant women were tested for HIV during this period, of whom 613 tested positive and have been linked to treatment promptly to help eliminate vertical transmission of HIV/AIDS, the official said.
On the treatment side, Haryana has expanded its anti-retroviral therapy (ART) through 24 ART centres spread across Rohtak, Gurugram, Faridabad, Karnal, Hisar, Ambala and Mewat, etc.
Thirteen of these have been newly established within medical colleges, she said.
Five facility-integrated ART centres and four link ART centres are also operational, and altogether, 40,851 patients across the state are currently receiving treatment, she said.
The state government launched a monthly financial assistance scheme in December 2021, providing Rs 2,250 to People Living with HIV (PLHIV).
A total of Rs 54.3 crore has been disbursed under this scheme so far, Misra said.
Haryana is also addressing sexually transmitted infections through 31 designated clinics offering free counselling, syphilis testing and treatment, the statement said.
A parallel network of 42 targeted intervention projects, run through Red Cross Societies and NGOs, is working with high-risk groups, including female sex workers, men who have sex with men, intravenous drug users, truckers, and migrant labourers.
For those dependent on opioids, 12 opioid substitution therapy centres and three satellite units are operational in Haryana, with 9,014 patients registered and about 4,570 receiving regular treatment, according to the statement.
The state has also enlisted multiple government departments to raise awareness through its mainstreaming initiatives, it said.