Chandigarh, May 15, 2026 (Yes Punjab News)
As the world marks World Hypertension Day, the Bhagwant Mann Government’s Mukh Mantri Sehat Yojna (MMSY) is bringing significant relief to patients battling high blood pressure and related ailments by ensuring affordable and timely healthcare access.
With hypertension emerging as a growing health concern across all age groups, the scheme is helping thousands of families across Punjab avoid the burden of expensive treatment and medicines.
Hypertension, commonly known as high blood pressure, is often described by doctors as the “silent killer”. It shows little warning before triggering strokes, heart failure or kidney disease. The condition Is common across age groups.
Visit hospitals and you see elderly men sit silently waiting for test results. Women clutching prescription slips folded carefully into handbags. Younger patients, once considered too young for such ailments, now discuss blood pressure readings with growing worry. Behind every hospital file lies a family trying to balance illness with the fear of rising treatment costs.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), India carries a rapidly increasing burden of hypertension, fuelled by poor dietary habits, stress, tobacco use, lack of physical activity and irregular routines.
Doctors warn that many patients remain unaware of the condition until severe complications occur. Amid this growing health crisis, Punjab’s Mukh Mantri Sehat Yojna has become a critical safety net. The scheme is helping thousands of patients receive treatment for hypertension and related complications without the burden of unaffordable medical bills.
Hospital admissions linked to strokes, cardiac emergencies and kidney ailments caused by uncontrolled blood pressure are now being covered under the programme, offering relief to families already battling emotional distress.
Most hypertension patients in Punjab continue to belong to the middle-aged and elderly population, with the heaviest burden seen among those between 40 and 80 years of age. Data from State Health Agency (SHA) reveals that Gurdaspur recorded patients as old as 94, while S.A.S Nagar reported cases up to 98 years, underlining the disease’s deep reach among senior citizens.
Districts such as Patiala, S.A.S Nagar, Hoshiarpur, Jalandhar and Faridkot reported some of the highest and widest spreads of cases across both genders. In Amritsar and Ludhiana, hospital records show a particularly high concentration among women aged between 50 and 77 years.
Dr Saurabh Sharma, Associate Professor and Head of Department of Cardiology at Government Medical College and Rajindra Hospital, Patiala, says hypertension is no longer confined to old age.
“Modern lifestyles bring a different set of health challenges across all age groups. While the majority of hypertension cases are seen among people aged 40 to 90 and above, we are also witnessing cases in teenagers and people in their twenties and thirties,” he says.
Dr Saurabh Sharma adds, “Lifestyle factors such as stress, poor diet, lack of exercise, and irregular routines play a major role, though certain medical conditions can also lead to hypertension.” He further warns that the complications are appearing earlier than before. “What we are seeing now is not just high blood pressure, but its complications arriving earlier than before, stroke, heart failure and kidney disease.
Schemes like Mukh Mantri Sehat Yojna, Dr Saurabh Sharma says, are crucial because they ensure patients do not delay treatment due to financial fear. In hypertensive emergency, delay is often the difference between recovery and tragedy,” he informs.
Health officials say the scheme’s importance lies not merely in treatment, but in timely intervention. In earlier years, many families delayed hospitalisation because of financial fear. Such delays often proved dangerous, sometimes fatal.
Under the Sehat Yojna, patients are increasingly seeking medical attention earlier, improving their chances of recovery. For middle-class households, pensioners and government employees, the scheme has become a buffer against catastrophic expenditure.
On this World Hypertension Day, MMSY sehat card’s greatest achievement may not only be the number of claims settled, but the dignity it has preserved for patients who can now seek treatment without the shadow of financial ruin hanging over them.





































































































