Manipur, Goa best places to be born in

Post Reply
User avatar
admin
Site Admin
Posts: 994
Joined: Sun Jul 08, 2012 11:21 pm
Contact:

Manipur, Goa best places to be born in

Post by admin »

NewDelhi:Olympic medalist Mary Kom would be happy to hear this. Manipur has burst into the scene to become the best place to be born in India along with Goa.
For every 1,000 live births, only 11 newborns die in Manipur as compared to 59 in Madhya Pradesh, which ranks as the worst place in the country to be born.
The infant mortality rate (IMR) in Manipur has dipped to 11 in 2011 from 14 in 2010.
Goa, like last year, is still top of the table. However in a strange twist of events, the state has actually recorded an increase in IMR among smaller states – from 10 infant deaths per 1,000 live births to 11 in 2011.
West Bengal is the only major state to record a rise in IMR. The latest Sample Registration Survey data sent to the Union health ministry by the Registrar General of India shows that while the IMR for Bengal was 31 per 1000 live births in 2010, it has increased to 32 in 2011 Infant mortality rate falls in rural areas
Overall in India, IMR has dropped by three points from 47 to 44 infants deaths per 1,000 live births during 2011. IMR for rural areas has dropped by three points from 51 to 48 infant deaths, while the urban rate stands at 29 in 2011 over the previous 31 in 2010.
Around 19 more children die in rural India per 1,000 live births compared to urban India. While IMR in urban India stood at 29 in 2011, it was 48 in rural India.
In Maharashtra, 25 children died per 1,000 live births, whereas Delhi’s IMR stood at 28. Tamil Nadu had an IMR of 22 (24 in 2010).
According to SRS 2011, among major states, Maharashtra has seen the largest decline in IMR — 14.7% over 2010, followed by Punjab (11.5%), Karnataka and Kerala (10.3%), Tamil Nadu (9.3%) and Bihar (8.1%).
National Rural Health Mission chief Anuradha Gupta told TOI India saw a 6.3% reduction in annual infant mortality rate in 2011 compared to 1.7% in 2005. This, Gupta says, is largely due to the tremendous increase in institutional deliveries, thanks to Janani Suraksha Yojana, launched in April 2005, which promoted institutional delivery among would-be mothers by providing cash assistance.
“One big reason for the dip in IMR is the 24x7 public health facilities. Also, states have given tremendous attention to neonatal health. There are at present 384 sick and new born child units that handle critical neonatal cases,” she said.
States with the highest IMR are Madhya Pradesh (59), Odisha and Uttar Pradesh (57), Assam (55), Rajasthan and Meghalaya (52) and Chhattisgarh (48).
The states with the lowest IMR are Goa and Manipur (11), Kerala (12), Puducherry (19), Chandigarh (20) and Nagaland (21).
Urban IMR was highest in Chhattisgarh and Uttar Pradesh (41), followed by Odisha (40), Madhya Pradesh (39), Meghalaya (38) and Haryana (35). States like Assam (IMR 55), Chhattisgarh (48), Madhya Pradesh (59), Odisha (57), Rajasthan (52) and UP (57) still have IMRs more than the national average of 44.
Institutional deliveries, where children are delivered at health centres or hospitals and not their homes, have picked up in India over the last five-odd years.
-------------------------
With warm regards,
WBCSMadeEasy Team

For guidance by WBCS Officers
Call 9674 493 673 or mail us at mailus@www.wbcsmadeeasy.in/wbcs4all


(right click> "extract". For Android ph download "pocket extract")
Post Reply

Return to “News relating to national importance”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests