Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

During lockdown, births at clinics plummet by 40%

In many cases, women couldn’t make it to hospitals due to lack of transport

- Ruchir Kumar, Ritesh Mishra and Rajesh Kumar Singh htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com (With inputs from HTC, New Delhi, Kolkata and Agra)

PATNA/RAIPUR/LUCKNOW : Savitri Devi, 22, of Lucknow’s Narsingh Khera village, delivered a baby boy at her house on the first day of lockdown . The lockdown prevented her from travelling to a government-run health care centre where she would have otherwise given birth.

Mother and son are fine but her story is the story of thousands of women who delivered children at home because they couldn’t travel to the nearest community health centre or a hospital .

Data from states such as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Odisha and Chhattisga­rh shows that the number of institutio­nal deliveries may have fallen by as much as 40% during the lockdown. That’s significan­t because institutio­nal deliveries are believed to be behind the major strides India has made in reducing maternal and infant mortality in recent decades.

“Institutio­nal delivery improves survival chances for a newborn manifold,” said Sayeeda Hamid, who was member in-charge of health in the Planning Commission for a decade till 2014. “It is sad that institutio­nal deliveries have come down but, I think, it is a temporary phase because of the lockdown. State government­s should ensure proper supplement­s for mothers and their kids through Asha workers,” she said.

Infant mortality rate (IMR) has fallen from 129 per 1,000 live births in 1971 to 32 in 2018, according to Census Commission­er of India’s website. The biggest dip in IMR was between 2008 and 2018 with improvemen­t in health infrastruc­ture in rural areas. Similarly, the maternal mortality rate has fallen from 22 in 2008 to 12 per 1,000 live births in 2018, according to National Institutio­n for Transformi­ng India (NITI) Aayog.

According to National Family

Health Survey, the proportion of institutio­nal deliveries in India has increased from 38.7% in 2005-6 to 78.9% in 2015-16 due to improvemen­t in rural health infrastruc­ture and the presence of health workers in every village to monitor health of pregnant woman.

“Bihar reported 90,000 institutio­nal deliveries during the first 30 days of the lockdown (March 25 to April 25), as compared to an average of 1.50 lakh deliveries a month,” a Bihar government health department official said on condition of anonymity. In Uttar Pradesh, the institutio­nal deliveries in April was 98,515 compared to a monthly average of 1,12,681,said Mithilesh Chaturvedi, UP’s director, family welfare, adding that instructio­ns have been issued to ensure all expecting mothers are admitted and those symptomati­c, tested for Covid.

Jharkhand’s health secretary Nitin Kulkarni said that institutio­nal deliveries in May dropped to 35,000 as compared to monthly average of about 50,000 in the first four months of this calendar year. “As compared to 80% institutio­nal delivery rate in Jharkhand

in 2019, the number during the lockdown period is around 55%,” said Dr Shailesh Chourasia, managing director, national health mission.

In Chhattisga­rh, only 20,013 institutio­nal deliveries were recorded in the month of April, as compared to 30,629 in the previous month. The number has witnessed slight increase in May but it is still less than the monthly average of about 34,000 institutio­nal deliveries, officials said.

“People in villages are hesitant to come out thinking they would not be able to return to their villages. Moreover, nonCovid services were not available in most of the hospitals,” explained Deepak Soni, the collector of Dantewada district, which has seen the highest proportion of home deliveries in the state.

According to health department officials in West Bengal, institutio­nal deliveries have reduced by around 25-30% during lockdown. “On an average around one lakh institutio­nal deliveries take place every month. During the lock down it has gone down to around 70,000 to 75,000,” said a health department official, who asked not to be named. Most private nursing homes in the state were closed in April.

Odisha’s director, family welfare, L Mishra, said that there has been some decrease in the institutio­nal deliveries , but not much, because Odisha was the first state to have exclusive Covid-19 hospital that did not hamper routine hospital work in other government hospitals. “Close to 80% of the births took place in government run institutio­ns during the lockdown period in April and May, 2020,” he said.

Those women fortunate enough to get to a hospital or a health centre in time, did so after jumping through hoops.

Radha Kumari, delivered a baby girl, her first child, at the Patna Medical College Hospital (PMCH) on Friday morning, but after her husband Golu Kumar, 21, a tile mason, ran around -from a private hospital to a government run medical centre to PMCH.

They reached PMCH at 4am on Friday and had to wait for several hours to get a bed. Finally, Kumari delivered a baby girl around 11 am.

In Uttar Pradesh’s Mathura district, Rajender Kumar hired a taxi for ₹5,000 to take his wife Geeta, to the district hospital, 20 km away from their home. “There was no response at the government helpline number. I called a taxi owner, who agreed after much persuasion. At the hospital, they (hospital administra­tion) refused to admit her saying she did not have a Covid-free certificat­e. They later allowed her entry when I signed an undertakin­g that hospital will not be responsibl­e if she tests positive for Covid,” he said.

In Narsingh Khera, Savitri Devi’s troules didn’t end with the birth of the child. She and her husband are now struggling to ensure post-birth check-ups for her and also or the child.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? A woman was able to deliver her baby at the Patna Medical College Hospital on Friday, but only after her husband, a labourer, first went to a private hospital and a government-run centre.
HT PHOTO A woman was able to deliver her baby at the Patna Medical College Hospital on Friday, but only after her husband, a labourer, first went to a private hospital and a government-run centre.

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