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NFHS‑6 Shows Gains in Child Health but Rising Obesity – Implications for India’s Health Policy

NFHS‑6 (2023‑24) में बाल स्वास्थ्य में उल्लेखनीय सुधार दिखते हैं—कम कुपोषण, अधिक संस्थागत प्रसव और टीकाकरण—जबकि वयस्कों में मोटापे में तेज़ वृद्धि हो रही है। ये विपरीत प्रवृत्तियाँ दोहरी स्वास्थ्य बोझ का संकेत देती हैं, जिससे नीति निर्माताओं को NCD स्क्रीनिंग का विस्तार करने, विशिष्ट स्तनपान को बढ़ावा देने, और भारत के जनसांख्यिकीय परिवर्तन के साथ स्वास्थ्य‑प्रणाली वित्तपोषण को सुदृढ़ करने की आवश्यकता है।
Overview The NFHS ‑6, released for 2023‑24, paints a mixed picture. Child‑health indicators have improved markedly, while adult‑health risks such as obesity are climbing. The data serve as a reality check for health managers and policy‑makers. Key Developments (2023‑24) Stunting fell by 17% and severe wasting by 32% among children under five. Institutional deliveries crossed the 90% mark. Full immunisation for children aged 12‑23 months rose to over 87% . The TFR stabilised at 2.0 , below replacement level (2.1). Obesity prevalence increased to 27.3% in men and 30.7% in women. Exclusive breastfeeding among infants under six months dropped from 63.7% (NFHS‑5) to 55.8% . Important Facts The rise in obesity reflects a “ dual public‑health burden ” where under‑nutrition co‑exists with lifestyle‑related diseases. Parallel surveys like the SRS and the National Health Accounts Survey echo the same trend, showing limited funding for metabolic disorders. UPSC Relevance Understanding these indicators is vital for GS‑3 (Health, Economy, Demography) and GS‑4 (Governance). The data illustrate how health outcomes influence population dynamics, fiscal allocations, and policy priorities. Aspirants should link the improvement in child health to India’s commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals, while recognising the emerging challenge of NCDs to the demographic transition towards an ageing society. Way Forward Launch nationwide <span class="key-term" data-definition="Non‑communicable diseases — chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and cancers
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Overview

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<h3>Overview</h3> <p>The <span class="key-term" data-definition="National Family Health Survey — a large‑scale, periodic household survey that provides data on health, nutrition and population indicators; crucial for evidence‑based policy making (GS3: Health, GS4: Governance)">NFHS</span>‑6, released for 2023‑24, paints a mixed picture. Child‑health indicators have improved markedly, while adult‑health risks such as obesity are climbing. The data serve as a reality check for health managers and policy‑makers.</p> <h3>Key Developments (2023‑24)</h3> <ul> <li><strong>Stunting</strong> fell by <strong>17%</strong> and severe wasting by <strong>32%</strong> among children under five.</li> <li>Institutional deliveries crossed the <strong>90%</strong> mark.</li> <li>Full immunisation for children aged 12‑23 months rose to over <strong>87%</strong>.</li> <li>The <span class="key-term" data-definition="Total Fertility Rate — average number of children a woman would bear over her reproductive life; a key demographic indicator for population planning (GS3: Demography)">TFR</span> stabilised at <strong>2.0</strong>, below replacement level (2.1).</li> <li>Obesity prevalence increased to <strong>27.3%</strong> in men and <strong>30.7%</strong> in women.</li> <li>Exclusive breastfeeding among infants under six months dropped from <strong>63.7%</strong> (NFHS‑5) to <strong>55.8%</strong>.</li> </ul> <h3>Important Facts</h3> <p>The rise in obesity reflects a “<span class="key-term" data-definition="Non‑communicable diseases — chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and cancers that are not infectious; a growing health burden for India (GS3: Health, GS4: Governance)">dual public‑health burden</span>” where under‑nutrition co‑exists with lifestyle‑related diseases. Parallel surveys like the <span class="key-term" data-definition="Sample Registration System — a demographic survey that records births and deaths in India, providing vital statistics for planning (GS3: Demography)">SRS</span> and the National Health Accounts Survey echo the same trend, showing limited funding for metabolic disorders.</p> <h3>UPSC Relevance</h3> <p>Understanding these indicators is vital for GS‑3 (Health, Economy, Demography) and GS‑4 (Governance). The data illustrate how health outcomes influence population dynamics, fiscal allocations, and policy priorities. Aspirants should link the improvement in child health to India’s commitment to the Sustainable Development Goals, while recognising the emerging challenge of <span class="key-term" data-definition="Non‑communicable diseases — chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and cancers that are not infectious; a growing health burden for India (GS3: Health, GS4: Governance)">NCDs</span> to the demographic transition towards an ageing society.</p> <h3>Way Forward</h3> <ul> <li>Launch nationwide <span class="key-term" data-definition="Non‑communicable diseases — chronic diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and cancers
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NFHS‑6 reveals child‑health gains but rising obesity, urging policy shift to NCDs

Key Facts

  1. NFHS‑6 (2023‑24) पाँच वर्ष से कम उम्र के बच्चों में कुपोषण में 17% की गिरावट दिखाता है।
  2. उसी अवधि में पाँच वर्ष से कम उम्र के बच्चों में गंभीर कुपोषण में 32% की गिरावट आई।
  3. संस्थागत प्रसव 90% से ऊपर बढ़े और पूर्ण टीकाकरण 87% से अधिक हो गया।
  4. कुल प्रजनन दर 2.0 पर स्थिर रही, जो प्रतिस्थापन स्तर 2.1 से नीचे है।
  5. पुरुषों में मोटापे की प्रचलन 27.3% और महिलाओं में 30.7% तक बढ़ी।

Background & Context

The data highlight India's dual health burden: progress in reducing under‑nutrition alongside a surge in lifestyle‑related NCD risk. This mirrors the demographic transition to an ageing population and aligns with SDG targets on health and nutrition.

UPSC Syllabus Connections

Essay•Youth, Health and WelfareGS2•Issues relating to poverty and hungerGS1•Population and Associated IssuesGS2•Government policies and interventions for developmentGS2•Issues relating to Health, Education, Human ResourcesPrelims_GS•Demographics and Social SectorGS4•Work culture, quality of service delivery, utilization of public funds, corruptionGS2•Governance, transparency, accountability and e-governanceGS1•Poverty and Developmental IssuesGS4•Concept of public service, philosophical basis of governance and probity

Mains Answer Angle

GS‑3 (Health, Demography, Governance) – discuss how NFHS‑6 findings should reshape health policy, balancing nutrition programmes with NCD prevention.

Analysis

Practice Questions

GS1
Easy
Prelims MCQ

स्वास्थ्य संकेतक

1 marks
4 keywords
GS3
Medium
Mains Short Answer

एनसीडी नीति

10 marks
5 keywords
GS3
Hard
Mains Essay

स्वास्थ्य शासन और जनसांख्यिकी

250 marks
10 keywords
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Key Insight

NFHS‑6 reveals child‑health gains but rising obesity, urging policy shift to NCDs

Key Facts

  1. NFHS‑6 (2023‑24) पाँच वर्ष से कम उम्र के बच्चों में कुपोषण में 17% की गिरावट दिखाता है।
  2. उसी अवधि में पाँच वर्ष से कम उम्र के बच्चों में गंभीर कुपोषण में 32% की गिरावट आई।
  3. संस्थागत प्रसव 90% से ऊपर बढ़े और पूर्ण टीकाकरण 87% से अधिक हो गया।
  4. कुल प्रजनन दर 2.0 पर स्थिर रही, जो प्रतिस्थापन स्तर 2.1 से नीचे है।
  5. पुरुषों में मोटापे की प्रचलन 27.3% और महिलाओं में 30.7% तक बढ़ी।

Background

The data highlight India's dual health burden: progress in reducing under‑nutrition alongside a surge in lifestyle‑related NCD risk. This mirrors the demographic transition to an ageing population and aligns with SDG targets on health and nutrition.

UPSC Syllabus

  • Essay — Youth, Health and Welfare
  • GS2 — Issues relating to poverty and hunger
  • GS1 — Population and Associated Issues
  • GS2 — Government policies and interventions for development
  • GS2 — Issues relating to Health, Education, Human Resources
  • Prelims_GS — Demographics and Social Sector
  • GS4 — Work culture, quality of service delivery, utilization of public funds, corruption
  • GS2 — Governance, transparency, accountability and e-governance
  • GS1 — Poverty and Developmental Issues
  • GS4 — Concept of public service, philosophical basis of governance and probity

Mains Angle

GS‑3 (Health, Demography, Governance) – discuss how NFHS‑6 findings should reshape health policy, balancing nutrition programmes with NCD prevention.

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