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Varying IMR across India

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October 15, 2017

What is the issue?

  • Despite its rapid GDP growth, India stands at 49th position out of 225 countries with 40.50 IMR.
  • In India there is a high Intra-State and Inter-State variations in IMR, such variations receives less attention from policymakers.

What is IMR?

  • Infant mortality rate compares the number of deaths of infants under one year old in a given year per 1,000 live births in the same year.
  • This rate is often used as an indicator of the level of health in a country and of the quality of life in a community.
  • High infant mortality has been linked to poor maternal health and inter-generational poverty in families.

What are IMRvariations among states in India?

  • The biggest drivers of neo-natal deaths in India are premature birth, low birth weight, neo-natal infections, asphyxia and trauma.
  • After the first month, diarrhoea and pneumonia become the leading causes of death.
  • According to India’s Sample Registration System, Goa (8), Pondicherry (10), Kerala (6) and Manipur (9) saw the lowest infant-mortality rates in 2016.
  • While Madhya Pradesh, Assam, Odisha and Uttar Pradesh saw the highest, in that order.
  • Despite Kerala’s low infant mortality, the hilly regions of districts like Kasargod have historically lagged behind.
  • Similarly, the Vidarba region of Maharashtra has suffered, while there are differences in eastern and western Uttar Pradesh.

What are the reasons for varying IMR across the states?

  • Per-capita spending on health in Indian States was the biggest predictor of infant mortality.
  • For example, tribal communities in Odisha have high rates of malnutrition, a big cause of infant mortality.
  • Southern States like Kerala have an extremely lower IMR because of widespread literacy and urbanisation.
  • The settlements intra state have higher IMR is due to lack of healthcare infrastructure facilities.
  • The willingness of people in rural and tribal areas to access this infrastructure is crucial.
  • Greater female autonomy, which mean women give birth at a later age and wait longer between births is a significant factor for lower IMR.
  • Even the transport infrastructure of a State can have a role in reducing infant mortality.

What can be done?

  • Low birth weight can be prevented if the mother is well-nourished, diarrhoea can be avoided by exclusively breast-feeding the child in the first six months.
  • Merely ensuring that women go to hospitals to deliver their children can prevent asphyxia and trauma.
  • The Janani Suraksha Yojana, an initiative under the National Rural Health Mission, which gives women a cash incentive for delivery in hospital, has had a great impact on infant mortality since it began in 2005.
  • Under the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), pregnant women received better care and newborn immunisations improved.
  • The uptake of the Janani Suraksha Yojana and NRHM needs to be ensured across the states it could address some of the variations inIMR across India.

 

Source: The Hindu

 

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