| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Institution Name | Regional Medical Research Centre |
| Country | India |
| Field | Medical Research and Public Health |
| Institution Type | Government Medical Research Institution |
| Parent Organisation | Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) |
| Location | India (multiple regional centres) |
Overview
Regional Medical Research Centres (RMRCs) are a network of government-funded biomedical research institutions operating under The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), which functions under the Department of Health Research, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India. These centres are distributed across different geographic regions of the country and are mandated to address region-specific health challenges, conduct epidemiological studies, and support national disease surveillance programmes. Each RMRC serves as a hub for translational and applied medical research relevant to the disease burden and public health priorities of its respective region.
Background
The establishment of Regional Medical Research Centres reflects the broader policy of decentralising biomedical research in India. Rather than concentrating research capacity solely in metropolitan institutions, ICMR created a network of regional bodies to ensure that diseases prevalent in tribal, coastal, northeastern, and other geographically distinct populations receive dedicated scientific attention. This approach has allowed for the collection of region-specific epidemiological data, the study of locally endemic diseases, and the development of public health interventions suited to local conditions.
RMRCs collaborate closely with state health departments, medical colleges, district hospitals, and national health programmes such as the National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme and the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme. They also serve as training grounds for researchers, postgraduate students, and public health professionals.
Research Focus Areas
While the specific research priorities of each RMRC vary according to its regional context, common areas of investigation across the network include:
- Vector-borne diseases such as malaria, dengue, Japanese encephalitis, and kala-azar
- Tuberculosis and other respiratory infections
- Tribal health and nutrition
- Non-communicable diseases including diabetes, hypertension, and cancer epidemiology
- Maternal and child health
- Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases
- Environmental health and occupational diseases
- Antimicrobial resistance surveillance
Academic and Training Programmes
RMRCs offer research training opportunities to scientists, postdoctoral fellows, and students enrolled in PhD and MD programmes affiliated with recognised universities. ICMR provides fellowships and short-term studentships that allow young researchers to work at these centres. The centres also conduct workshops, capacity-building programmes, and collaborative research projects with national and international academic institutions.
Several RMRCs are recognised as research sites for clinical trials and observational studies registered with the Clinical Trials Registry of India (CTRI). Their laboratories are equipped to handle diagnostic and investigative work in microbiology, molecular biology, entomology, biochemistry, and epidemiology.
Hospital and Clinical Engagement
Although RMRCs are primarily research institutions rather than teaching hospitals, many maintain active linkages with nearby government hospitals and medical colleges. This enables researchers to conduct hospital-based studies, recruit patient cohorts, and translate laboratory findings into clinical practice. Field stations and outreach units attached to some centres allow for community-based research in rural and tribal areas.
Campus and Facilities
Each RMRC campus typically houses scientific laboratories, a library and documentation centre, animal facilities for experimental research, conference and seminar halls, and residential quarters for visiting researchers and staff. Biosafety laboratories at several centres are equipped to handle infectious agents under appropriate containment conditions as per national biosafety guidelines.
Significance
The RMRC network has played a meaningful role in generating evidence that informs national health policy. Research outputs from these centres have contributed to disease burden estimates, vaccine evaluations, drug efficacy studies, and outbreak investigations. During public health emergencies, RMRCs have functioned as rapid response units providing diagnostic support and epidemiological analysis to state and central authorities.