Daily News Analysis ‘National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6)
’ : 30 May
Why in News:
The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare released the primary data from the National Family Health Survey-6, documenting post-pandemic shifts across India’s demographic, maternal, and child health indicators.
Key Facts: Core Demographics, Health Indicators, and Trends
Institutional Framework: The National Family Health Survey-6 was conducted under the administrative aegis of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, with the International Institute for Population Sciences functioning as the designated nodal agency for field operations.
Fertility and Contraception Trends: India’s Total Fertility Rate held completely steady at 2.0, remaining structurally below the standard demographic replacement threshold of 2.1, while the overall Contraceptive Prevalence Rate advanced from 66.7% to 69.1%.
Maternal Healthcare Metrics: The survey recorded a rise in institutional deliveries to 90.6% alongside enhanced antenatal care coverage, showing that 76.2% of pregnant women received medical checkups within their first trimester.
Maternal Nutrition Surges: The consumption of critical iron-folic acid supplements during pregnancy increased, with mothers taking the tablets for 100 days or more rising to 54.9%, and those completing a 180-day or longer course jumping to 37.8%.
Child Malnutrition Drops: Significant improvements were noted in core child biometric parameters under five years of age: stunting (low height-for-age) declined from 35.5% to 29.3%, while severe wasting (low weight-for-height) dropped from 7.7% to 5.2%.
Immunization Milestones: Full vaccination coverage among infants aged 12-23 months advanced to 87.1%, driven by a massive expansion in rotavirus vaccine coverage to 85.4% and public health facilities delivering 95.6% of these total doses.
Emerging Health Challenges: The data flagged serious long-term lifestyle risks, including an escalating dual burden of undernutrition coexisting with adult obesity, alongside a steady rise in non-communicable diseases.