The National - News

India cares more about sick boys than girls

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Parents are less likely to seek help for a sick baby girl than a boy in India, where more female infants die within the first month of birth, the United Nations said.

More babies die in India than any other country, with 600,000 deaths recorded every year, a quarter of the global total, according to a report released on Tuesday by the UN children’s agency, Unicef.

Girls outnumber boys in this death toll, Unicef said, citing Indian government data. More girls die in the under-five age group as well, a category that recorded a nearly 65 per cent drop in mortality rates between 1990 and 2015.

“Girls have the advantage of being biological­ly stronger,

India offers free care to newborns but nearly 60 per cent of the infants admitted were boys

yet sadly they are extremely vulnerable, socially,” said Yasmin Ali Haque, a Unicef India representa­tive.

“The discrimina­tion begins even before they are born.”

India offers free care to newborns in more than 700 state-run hospitals dedicated to treating babies. But nearly 60 per cent of the infants admitted were boys, according to data collected last year by Unicef.

“This indicates the social barriers girls face. They have lesser value in the society,” said Gagan Gupta, a health specialist with Unicef.

Parents avoid taking their daughters for treatment because they do not want to leave work and lose wages, or pay expenses to travel to hospitals, Mr Gupta said.

Many parents prefer sons in India because social norms bar women from performing some religious rituals and inheriting property, although such discrimina­tion is illegal. Daughters are also often seen as a burden because families have to pay dowries when they marry.

A preference for sons encourages sex-selective abortions that has led to skewed sex ratios. There are an estimated 63 million “missing” women in India.

The Indian government has a campaign to protect and educate girls and young women, and has increased welfare funding for parents of female children.

But campaigner­s and health experts say the situation has not changed.

“Even at malnutriti­on centres more boys are brought in than girls,” said Narendra Gupta, a public health expert in north-west state of Rajasthan, which has high rates of female infant mortality.

“You find more malnourish­ed girls here than boys,” he said. “Socially, boys are still preferred to girls.”

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