Govt survey shows improved sex ratio, decline in IMR

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Feb 28 2017 | 9:22 PM IST
A latest survey by the government has shown positive trends in key health indicators, including an improvement in sex ratio at birth and a decline in infant mortality rate during 2015-16.
The National Family Health Survey -4 (NFHS-4) for 2015-16 unvield by the Health Ministry was conducted after collecting information from 6 lakh households, 7 lakh women and 1.3 lakh men, and for the first time provide district level estimates.
"Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) declined from 57 to 41 per 1,000 live births between NFHS-3 (2005-06) and NFHS-4. IMR has declined substantially in almost all the states during the last decade. It dropped by more than 20 percentage points in Tripura, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Arunachal Pradesh, Rajasthan and Odisha.
"IMR substantially declined over the period from 79 per 1,000 live births in NFHS-1 (1992-93) to 41 per 1,000 live births in NFHS-4," Health secretary C K Mishra said.
According to the Health Ministry, the results of the survey reflected that concerted efforts and focussed interventions in the sector could translate to improved outcomes.
The survey also stated that sex ratio at birth (number of females per 1,000 males) improved from 914 to 919 at the national level over the last decade with the highest in Kerala (1,047), followed by Meghalaya (1,009) and Chhattisgarh (977). Haryana also witnessed a significant increase from 762 to 836.
Similarly, institutional births "dramatically" increased by 40 percentage points from 38.7 per cent in NFHS-3 to 78.9 per cent in NFHS-4.
There was an increase of 34.1 per cent institutional births in public facility, while the Empowered Action Group (EAG) in Assam experienced more than a 40 percentage point increase, the survey said.
"Targeted approach through Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) has paid off," Mishra said.
The Ministry said the proportion of women who received at least 4 antenatal care visits for their last birth has increased by 14 percentage points from 37 per cent to 51.2 per cent over the decade (2005-15), while there has been a substantial increase of 20 or more percentage points in seven states.
Total Fertility Rate (TFR) too declined to 2.2 children per woman from 2.7 in NFHS-3 moving closer to target level of 2.1, it said.
The survey found that there was considerable decline in the TFR in each of the 30 states in India with the maximum decline observed in Uttar Pradesh (1.1 child) followed by Nagaland (1.0 child), Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim (0.9 child each). Bihar, however, failed to register substantial decline.
"Children within the age of 12-23 months have been fully immunized (BCG, measles and 3 doses each of polio) and DPT increased by 18 percentage points from 44 per cent in NFHS-3 to 62 per cent in NFHS-4," it said.
The survey also found that there was a decline in
percentage of underweight children by 7 percentage points, a consequence of improved child feeding practices and focus on nutritional aspects of children, Mishra said.
There was "substantial" decline of anaemia among children aged 6-59 months as it declined from 69 per cent in NFHS-3 to 58 per cent in NFHS-4.
The maximum decrease was reported in Assam with 34 percentage points followed by Chhattisgarh (30 percentage points), Mizoram (26 percentage points) and Odisha (20 percentage points), he said.
The survey found that in the category of children under the age of 3 years, who were breastfed within one hour of birth, there was substantial increase of 19 percentage points between NFHS-3 and NFHS-4.
"Unmet needs for family planning has shown a decline, pointing towards increased outreach of family planning methods. Contraceptive prevalence rate among currently married women increased by 7 percentage points from NFHS-1 (41 per cent) to NFHS-2 (48 per cent), 8 percentage points from NFHS-2 to NFHS-3 (56 per cent).
"However, the contraceptive prevalence rate decreased by 2 percentage points from NFHS-3 to NFHS-4 (54 per cent), but pills and condom usage have shown increasing trend," the survey said.
Mishra said malnutrition has been coming down, thanks to supplementary nutrition and efforts at the health facilities, adding that mortality due to malnutrition is also coming down.
He said although institutional delivery had gone up, "it should have been more than 90 per cent which it has not reached yet."
Mishra maintained there was a need to increase the number of PG seats in the medical field.
"You are producing 65,000 MBBS doctors against which you have PGs of 26,000 plus. The demand and supply gap is so much that every young doctor recruited to the field spends his time preparing for PG. The effort now is to kick up the PG seats," Mishra said.
Asked about Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), the Ministry officials said there was no proposal for providing fixed salaries to them and they will get incentives.
The officials admitted that there was a shortage of Auxiliary Nurse Midwifery (ANMs).
"Some states like Bihar has as high as 25 per cent shortage. Nationally there is a 15 per cent shortage in this regard," they added.
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First Published: Feb 28 2017 | 9:22 PM IST

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