Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan (PMSMA) is a maternal health programme launched by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to provide assured, comprehensive and quality antenatal care to pregnant women.
The scheme focuses on pregnant women in their 2nd and 3rd trimester and provides fixed-day antenatal services on the 9th day of every month at government health facilities. Its main objective is early detection and management of high-risk pregnancies to reduce maternal and neonatal deaths.
Objective and Coverage
PMSMA aims to ensure that every pregnant woman receives at least one quality antenatal check-up by a medical officer or specialist during pregnancy.
The programme covers pregnant women in both rural and urban areas through public health facilities such as:
- Primary Health Centres
- Community Health Centres
- District Hospitals
- Urban health facilities
- designated government health centres
The focus is not only on routine check-up, but on identifying complications early so that women can be referred for timely treatment.
Services Provided
Under PMSMA, pregnant women receive a minimum package of antenatal care services.
These include:
- pregnancy examination
- blood pressure check-up
- haemoglobin testing
- urine testing
- blood group testing
- ultrasound where available
- screening for diabetes and hypertension
- tetanus and other required care
- nutrition counselling
- birth preparedness counselling
- referral for high-risk cases
Special ANC services are provided by obstetricians, radiologists, physicians or trained medical officers at government facilities.
High-Risk Pregnancy Identification
One of the most important features of PMSMA is the identification and tracking of high-risk pregnancies.
High-risk pregnancy may include conditions such as severe anaemia, hypertension, diabetes, bleeding, previous caesarean section, multiple pregnancy, malpresentation, low maternal weight or other complications.
The scheme uses a simple colour-coded system on the Mother and Child Protection card:
- Green sticker: no risk factor detected
- Red sticker: high-risk pregnancy detected
Women identified as high-risk are expected to be tracked and referred to appropriate facilities for specialised care and institutional delivery. The official PMSMA framework specifically requires line-listing and individual tracking of high-risk pregnant women.
Significance
PMSMA is important because many maternal deaths are preventable if complications are identified early.
India’s maternal health challenges are often linked with anaemia, hypertension, postpartum haemorrhage, sepsis, unsafe abortion, delayed referral and poor access to specialist care.
The scheme helps by creating a fixed-day, predictable antenatal care platform. This makes it easier for pregnant women, ASHA workers, ANMs, doctors and health facilities to coordinate care.
Its significance lies in:
- improving quality of antenatal care
- detecting high-risk pregnancies early
- reducing maternal mortality
- reducing neonatal complications
- improving institutional delivery preparedness
- strengthening referral linkages
- bringing specialists into public antenatal care services
The programme is especially important for poor and rural women who may otherwise receive only irregular or incomplete antenatal care.
Implementation Issues
The main challenge is ensuring that PMSMA does not become only a monthly check-up event.
High-risk pregnancy identification must be followed by actual treatment, referral, transport support and institutional delivery at a facility capable of managing complications.
Major concerns include:
- shortage of gynaecologists and specialists
- weak referral systems in some districts
- lack of ultrasound or diagnostic facilities
- poor follow-up after high-risk identification
- delayed antenatal registration
- anaemia and nutrition gaps
- uneven quality across states
- dependence on frontline workers for mobilisation
Some states have started using digital tracking tools for high-risk pregnancies. For example, Uttar Pradesh used online registration and electronic records under PMSMA to track pregnant women and identify high-risk cases for specialised care.
Conclusion
Pradhan Mantri Surakshit Matritva Abhiyan is a fixed-day antenatal care programme for pregnant women in the 2nd and 3rd trimester.
Its core strength is the early detection and tracking of high-risk pregnancies through assured monthly check-ups on the 9th of every month.
The scheme can reduce maternal and neonatal deaths only if screening is linked with timely referral, specialist care, safe delivery planning and strong follow-up of high-risk pregnant women.



