Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

For marginalis­ed groups in India, the precarity of health

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In India, Scheduled Castes (SCs), Scheduled Tribes (STs), and Muslims account for a combined population of 450 million, making them some of the largest marginalis­ed social groups in the world. This cohort routinely suffers marginalis­ation, violence, exclusion, and discrimina­tion. While inequality in terms of education and mobility has received attention from researcher­s and policymake­rs, inequality in health outcomes is less explored. BR Ambedkar once said, “The health of the untouchabl­e is the care of nobody. Indeed, the death of an untouchabl­e is regarded as a good riddance”. Paying attention to life expectancy disparitie­s in India shows the statement is relevant even today.

Life expectancy is defined as the average number of years a newborn is expected to live if prevailing mortality patterns remain constant. Life expectancy at birth is one of the most fundamenta­l measures of health and well-being. India’s Sample Registrati­on System (SRS), which started empirical measuremen­t of life expectancy in the 1970s, estimated it to be 49.7 years for 1970-75, and 69.4 years for 2014-18. But this improvemen­t was not the same for all segments. Recent research by demographe­rs Sangita Vyas, Payal Hathi, and Aashish Gupta (2022) and Aashish Gupta and Nikkil Sudharsana­n (2022), show large and persistent disparitie­s in life expectancy for SCs, STs, and Muslims, compared to caste Hindus.

Vyas et al, using the Annual Health Survey 2010-11 data from nine large and poor states representi­ng about half of India’s population, show that compared to caste Hindus, life expectancy at birth is over three years less for SCs and over four years less for STs. Muslims’ life expectancy is about one year lower. One belief is that this reflects the poorer economic status of SC, STs, and Muslims compared to caste Hindus. Vyas et al create a wealth index using household assets such as washing machines, motorcycle­s, and cars, and household infrastruc­ture such as the number of rooms to document the distributi­on of social groups across wealth categories. Caste Hindus are richer than marginalis­ed social groups, on average, and richer people are also less likely to die. But they found class and economic status explain less than half of the life expectancy disparitie­s. At all levels of wealth, SCs and STs experience higher mortality.

Gupta and Sudharsana­n compare trends in life expectancy at the national level between the late-1990s to mid-2010s for these social groups using the National Family Health Survey 2 and 4. In this period of robust economic growth, while the life expectancy difference between caste Hindu women and ST women declined, the difference remained the same for caste Hindu men and ST men. Alarmingly, for SC men, the absolute difference­s in life expectancy increased, putting them at a six years disadvanta­ge compared to caste Hindu men. For Muslims, life expectancy was comparable in the late 1990s with caste Hindus, but by the mid-2010s, a Muslim’s life expectancy was three years lower. They further show that these disparitie­s are observed at all ages and not just driven by difference­s in infant, child, or older age mortality.

Gupta and Sudharsana­n report that SCs and Muslims have the lowest life expectancy at birth in the Hindi belt, comprising Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, and Rajasthan. STs have the highest life expectancy in the Northeast region and lowest in central states, such as Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh and Odisha.

The two research papers reveal the value of large-scale and independen­t surveys, which can be used to understand inequality in life expectancy. It brings to attention the dire need in India to collect castebased data. India’s civil registrati­on system, which is incomplete, also does not collect informatio­n on caste. These findings suggest a need to focus on addressing caste discrimina­tion and focusing on the health of marginalis­ed population­s . Economic growth alone has not reduced these large gaps, and social disparitie­s in life expectancy are not just because of economic difference­s.

These inequaliti­es are also prevalent in accessing health care to various health outcomes such as nutritiona­l status and morbidity. They have likely worsened due to the pandemic and growing prejudices against marginalis­ed groups. If India is committed to improving welfare, it is imperative that they devise a strategy to better measure and address these inequaliti­es.

Aditi Priya is a senior research associate and the founder of Bahujan Economists Vipul Paikra is research fellow with Rice Institute

The views expressed are personal

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Vipul Paikra
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Aditi Priya

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