The
Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) of a population is the number of children dying
before celebrating their first birth day out of one thousand number of children
born.
As
per ORGI’s Sample Registration System’s Statistical Reports, the Infant
Mortality Rate (IMR) across the country had declined to 42 in 2012 from 58 in
2005, the year when National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) was launched.
While 15 states or Union
Territories out of 35 states have achieved the expected/targeted level of IMR
of 30. The states having IMR falling in the range (30, 42] are twelve
states namely, Andhra Pradesh, Empowered Action Group (EAG) States (Jharkhand, Uttarakhand),
Gujarat, Haryana, , Karnataka, West Bengal, Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal
Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Mizoram, and Dadar & Nagar Haveli and the
remaining eight states/UTs have IMR above 42 and these are: Assam, six EAG States
(Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh) and
Meghalaya.
The
highest IMR for any state/UT is for Madhya Pradesh (56) and second highest is
for Assam (55), followed by Odisha (53) and Uttar Pradesh (53). None other state/UT is above 50 mark.
The Government has already
addressing the issue through State Governments in mission mode by having
National Rural Health Mission. The Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) is one of
the most important programmes under the overall umbrella of National Rural
Health Mission by the Government of India and is aimed at reducing Maternal
Mortality Ratio (MMR) and Neo-natal Mortality Rate by promoting institutional
deliveries. Under the Scheme, cash incentives are provided to mothers and they
are facilitated by Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) (the name is
different in some of the states like Rajasthan it is known by the name
Sahyogini) to deliver their babies in a health facility. There are also
provisions for cost reimbursement for transport and incentives to ASHAs for
encouraging mothers to opt for institutional delivery. The scheme is fully
sponsored by the Central Government and is implemented in all States and
Union Territories, with special focus on low-performing States like EAG states
where the Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) and MMR are the highest in the country. Thus,
seeing above much more focus should be given to the above mentioned six EAG States,
Assam and Meghalaya (north eastern states). For the other above twelve
listed states, two being EAG states, where still the IMR is more than the
targeted value of 30 need to be addressed by strengthening the implementation
of already existing JSY programme. As about two-third of infants die within
first four weeks and quite many are vulnerable in the very first week of their
life, they need much more care particularly during the first week after
delivery. For the mothers and/or children who have some kind of illness
or complications at the time of delivery, they need to be taken care more and
should be kept in the hospital/health institution for more number of days just
after the delivery than the normal period of the stay post delivery. There after immunization programme should
also need to be implemented with all seriousness in all these vulnerable
states.
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