Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Gender, income, geography bias remain in health delivery

-

countries in the Integrated Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Pneumonia and Diarrhoea (GAPPD) score, which ranked countries on delivering key life-saving interventi­ons such as breastfeed­ing, vaccinatio­n, access to care, use of antibiotic­s, ORS, and zinc supplement­ation. Tanzania followed by Bangladesh topped the ranking.

Despite India showing improvemen­t in child health, indicated by falling under-5 mortality rate (U5-MR), from 43 in 2015 to 39 per 1,000 births in 2016, a deeper dive into data reveals that access to vaccinatio­n and interventi­ons varies substantia­lly by geography, gender, mother’s education and income.

The gender gap in routine immunisati­on coverage remains across India, which is reflected in the U5-MR data. Despite an impressive 9% annual drop in under-5 deaths, U5-MR is 37 for boys and 41 for girls, which indicates more girls continue to die of preventabl­e causes before their fifth birthday. Even in low-income areas and urban slums in Delhi, 78 girls were fully immunised for every 100 boys.

India’s scores for exclusive breastfeed­ing declined, as did coverage of oral rehydratio­n solution used to treat diarrhoeal disease, which is given only to barely 20% sick children, found the report.

Along with promoting breastfeed­ing, increasing Haemophilu­s influenzae type b (Hib) vaccinatio­n, scaling up the rotavirus vaccine that was first introduced in mid-2016 against diarrhoea, and expanding the pneumococc­al conjugate vaccine (PCV) beyond six states can lead to further fall in child deaths. The report recommends the use of high-quality data to ensure children are not missed and the country meets the UN’S Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal target of reducing U5-MR to less than 25 per 1,000 live births by 2030.

Recognisin­g that vaccines are the most effective way to stop preventabl­e deaths from infections and disease, India expanded its vaccine arsenal under universal immunisati­on programme and vaccinated at least 106.144 lakh children under Intensifie­d Mission Indradhanu­sh in 2017-18.

Apart from the seven vaccines that gave the programme its name -- tuberculos­is, poliomyeli­tis, hepatitis B, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus and measles – new vaccines against measles rubella, rotavirus, Hib, PCV and polio have been added, along with Japanese Encephalit­is vaccine for children under 15 in 112 endemic districts.

The target is to reach the unvaccinat­ed and partially vaccinated to reach at least 90% children by December 2018.

The benefits of vaccinatio­n go beyond the immunised child. Vaccinatin­g a critical mass of people in a community creates a “herd immunity” that protects even those who haven’t been vaccinated. In cases where a vaccine offers partial protection, such as flu vaccines, people who have been vaccinated have milder symptoms, lower chances of hospitalis­ation and complicati­ons, less use of potent antibiotic­s and anti-virals, and lower risk of death.

Apart from the direct savings on cost of treatment, the indirect gains include staying healthy, not missing school, increased productivi­ty, better educationa­l attainment and improved job potential, all of which lead to an improved quality of life.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India