The Global Burden of Disease study 2015 published in the Lancet which assesses the state of world's health, said over a million under-five children have died in 2015.
The study said that cardiovascular diseases account for a large and increasing proportion of deaths in India.
"Most countries in the region did better than expected at reducing health loss from strokes (like India, Pakistan) and lower respiratory infections (like Bangladesh, Nepal).
The study said that while Bangladesh has improved maternal survival much faster than expected, India and Nepal have fared poorly.
"In this analysis we have estimated that there were more deaths due to chronic kidney disease than in previous analysis because of improved estimates within countries with large populations such as China, India, and Russia," it said.
(REOPENS DEL 85)
Interestingly, the study found that in 2015, self-harm was the second-leading cause of death from injury and nearly half of all self-harm deaths occurred in India and China.
It, however, said the trends in these countries have reversed, decreasing significantly in China but rising in India from 1990 to 2015.
"Over the past two decades China and India have both experienced rapid economic growth and urbanisation, and therefore the opposing trends might be explained by other factors," it said.
In 2015, an estimated 1.2 million deaths were due to HIV/AIDS (down 33.5 per cent since 2005) and 7,30,500 were due to malaria (down 37 per cent since 2005), the study said.
Another aspect of the study said that during 2005 to 2015, western European countries such as Spain had significant reductions in total deaths which indicate that not only are there specific interventions that can work, but also that population level reductions are possible in a short period.
"This trend is particularly the case for major fast-growing BRICS economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa)," it said.
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