The Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994 is a central law enacted to prevent sex selection and misuse of diagnostic techniques for sex determination leading to female foeticide.
The Act is formally known as the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994. It was enacted in 1994 and later amended in 2003 to bring pre-conception sex selection techniques within its scope.
Objective and Scope
The main objective of the Act is to prohibit sex selection before or after conception and regulate pre-natal diagnostic techniques.
It does not ban all pre-natal diagnostic procedures. It allows such techniques only for legitimate medical purposes, such as detecting:
- genetic abnormalities
- chromosomal abnormalities
- metabolic disorders
- congenital malformations
- sex-linked disorders
The Act prohibits the use of ultrasound, genetic counselling, genetic clinics, genetic laboratories or any diagnostic technique for determining or disclosing the sex of the foetus.
Key Provisions
The Act requires compulsory registration of all centres and facilities using pre-natal diagnostic techniques.
This includes:
- genetic counselling centres
- genetic laboratories
- genetic clinics
- ultrasound clinics
- imaging centres
- IVF centres using techniques that may enable sex selection
No such centre can operate without registration under the Act.
The Act prohibits:
- sex selection before conception
- sex determination after conception
- communication of foetal sex to parents or relatives
- advertisements related to sex selection or sex determination
- use of diagnostic techniques for non-medical purposes
- sale or use of ultrasound machines by unregistered bodies
The law also requires proper maintenance of records. In practice, failure to maintain mandatory records such as Form F can attract action because documentation is central to tracking misuse.
Authorities and Enforcement
The Act creates a regulatory framework for monitoring and enforcement.
Important authorities include:
- Central Supervisory Board
- State Supervisory Boards
- Appropriate Authorities
- Advisory Committees
The Appropriate Authority plays the main enforcement role at the state or district level. It can grant, suspend or cancel registration of clinics, investigate complaints, inspect premises, seize records and take legal action.
The Act gives authorities powers to search, seize and seal machines or equipment where violations are found.
Punishment
The Act provides criminal penalties for violation.
For a first offence, punishment may include imprisonment up to 3 years and fine up to ₹10,000.
For subsequent offences, punishment may extend up to 5 years and fine up to ₹50,000.
Medical practitioners convicted under the Act may also face suspension or removal of their name from the medical register.
The Act treats sex selection as a serious offence because it is linked with gender discrimination and violation of the right to life and dignity of the girl child.
Significance
The Act is important because technological misuse made sex-selective abortion easier after the spread of ultrasound and other diagnostic techniques.
Its significance lies in:
- preventing female foeticide
- protecting the girl child before birth
- regulating diagnostic technology
- improving sex ratio at birth
- discouraging commercialisation of sex selection
- linking medical ethics with gender justice
The Act recognises that technology itself is not the problem. The problem is its misuse in a society where son preference and gender discrimination exist.
Recent government reporting has linked enforcement of the Act with improvement in India’s Sex Ratio at Birth, noting an increase from 819 females per 1,000 males during 2016–18 to 917 during 2021–23, as per SRS Report 2023.
Implementation Concerns
The Act faces several implementation challenges.
The first concern is weak enforcement in some areas. Illegal sex determination can continue through informal networks, unregistered centres or collusion between families and medical practitioners.
The second concern is overemphasis on paperwork. Doctors sometimes argue that minor clerical errors are treated like serious violations, while actual sex-selection networks may remain difficult to detect.
The third concern is social demand. The law can regulate clinics, but it cannot alone eliminate son preference, dowry pressure, inheritance bias and patriarchal family norms.
Other concerns include:
- poor monitoring of ultrasound machines
- under-reporting of violations
- low conviction rates
- interstate sex-selection networks
- pressure on medical practitioners
- misuse of technology in fertility clinics
- lack of public awareness
Therefore, enforcement must be strict against deliberate sex selection, but it should also distinguish between genuine procedural errors and intentional criminal misuse.
Conclusion
The PCPNDT Act, 1994 is India’s main legal instrument against sex selection and misuse of diagnostic techniques for female foeticide.
It prohibits sex selection before and after conception, regulates diagnostic centres and punishes those involved in illegal sex determination.
Its success depends not only on legal enforcement, but also on changing social attitudes towards the girl child, improving women’s status and ensuring ethical medical practice.



