Health Status of the country
- The health of a nation is an essential component of development, vital to the
nation‟s economic growth and internal stability. Assuming the minimum level of health
- care to the population is a critical constituent of the development process.
- First, India has to complete its unfinished agenda of reducing maternal and
infant mortality as well as communicable diseases such as TB, Vector-borne disease of
malaria, Kala-azar and Filaria, water borne diseases such as
cholera, diarrhoeal diseases, leptospirosis, and vaccine-preventable measles
and tetanus.
- Second, India has to contend with the rising epidemic of non communicable
diseases including cancers, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, chronic
obstructive pulmonary diseases and injuries.
- Third, developing systems to cope with the new and re-emerging infectious
diseases like HIV, Avian influenza, SARS and very recent H1N1 influenza.
Since independence, India has built up a vast health infrastructure and health personnel
and considerable achievements have been made over the last six decades to improve key
health indicators such as life expectancy, child mortality and infant mortality and
maternal mortality.
In 2005, India launched in a big way the National Health Mission (NRHM), an
extraordinary effort to strengthen the rural health care delivery systems. However, coverage
of priority interventions remains insufficient, and the content and the quality of existing
interventions are sub optimum.
India in the International Scenario in terms of key health indicators
The comparative picture with regard to key health indicators such as Life Expectancy,
Maternal Mortality Rate, Infant Mortality Rate and Total Fertility Rate points that
countries placed in almost same situations such as Indonesia, Sri Lanka and China have
performed much better than India.
Life expectancy in India has more than doubled in years the last sixty years. It increased
from around 30 years at the time of independence to over 63.5 years in 2002-2006.
India‟s life expectancy is lower than the global average of 67.5 years and the average of
most of countries that won their independence from colonial rule at about the same time
like China, Vietnam, Srilanka and so on.
India‟s Infant Mortality Rate too has shown a steady decline from 129 deaths per 1000
live births in 1971 t o 47 in 2010. The rate of decline has been slowing from 9
points in the 1970s to 16 points in the current decade. Currently, the urban IMR is 31 as
compared to the rural IMR of 51.
India is not in an appreciable situation when compared with the countries of the same
region.The problem of estimating MMR has been the fixing of a reliable denominator due to
the comparative rarity of the event, necessitating a large sample size. However, given
this constraint, data suggests that India had a MMR of 400 in 1997-98 to 301 in 2001-03
declining to 254 deaths per 100000 live births in 2004-2006 and 212 in 2007-09.
On the maternal mortality front, South Asian nations except Sri Lanka do worse than India,
and South Asia as a region has poor record of maternal mortality in the world, very
significantly affecting the global effect to achieve the MDG set for 2015.
The population stabilization is indicated through TFR, which is the average number of
children that a woman would bear over her lifetime if she were to experience the current
age-specific fertility rates. Total Fertility Rate has reduced from 5.2 in 1971 to 2.6 in
2008. India‟s record compares poorly with that of Japan, China and United States which
have TFR of 1.3, 1.7 and 2.1 respectively.
Variation of health indicators across the states
The special concern and challenge is the wide variance in health indication across the
states. Life expectancy is 74 years in Kerala whereas the life expectancy of states like
Assam, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh is in the range of
58-62 years, a level achieved during the period of 190-75 in Kerala. Similarly, Kerala and
Tamil Nadu reporting an MMR of 95 and 111 respectively lower than Assam (480),
Bihar/Jharkhand (312), Madhya Pradesh/ Chattisgarh (335), Orissa (303), Rajastan (388)
and Uttar Pradesh/Uttar khand (440).
Further, TFR of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and
Chhattisgarh that account for over 40% of India‟ population and have a TFR in the range
of 3.0 to 3.9 – a level that Kerala and Tamil Nadu had in the early 1970s.
The nine states Assam, Bihar/ Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh / Chhattisgarh, Orissa,
Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh / Uttar khand account for 47% of India‟s population represent the
core of our poor performance on all four indicators that is Life expectancy, IMR,
MMR and TFR.
Maternal Health – Antenatal Care
Maternal care involves three stages antenatal care (period of pregnancy), delivery care
and post natal care (care after the delivery of the baby) Even though every stage is
significant for the health of mother as well as child, antenatal care takes more emphasis
as it assures a safe delivery, less chances of neonatal deaths / infant deaths or maternal
deaths. Ante natal care involves timely appropriate checkups, taking Iron and Folic Acid
supplements and Tetanus toxin vaccines and delivery at hospital.
According to NFHS-3, less than half of the women received antenatal care during the
first trimester of pregnancy, 22% had their first visit during the fourth or fifth month
of pregnancy and 51% of mothers had three or more antenatal visits. Rural women are less
likely to receive three or more visits than urban women. 65% of the mothers received IFA
supplements, but only 23% consumed them for the recommended 90 days or more.
Three in Four mothers have received the prescribe dose of TT vaccination.
Delivery Care
Delivery at health facility in the presence of health professionals with the required