Steadily falling infant
deaths show a sudden rise in ’09
According To A Unicef Report,
65% Of The Fatalities Occur Within 28 Days Of Birth
Mumbai:
It may come as a shock that the city which had been seeing a
steady decline in the number of infant deaths since the past few
years, recorded a sudden increase in their numbers in 2009. The
year saw more infants dying than in 2008 — 5,866 infants in 2009
compared with 5,754 in 2008. This was revealed in a recent data
retrieved through the Right to Information.
Of the infants who died in 2009, 2,738 were female while
3,128 were male. The maximum number of deaths was recorded in
May at 742. Comparatively, fewer deaths were registered in
February and March.
Since 2006, the number of infant deaths recorded by the BMC
kept dropping every successive year.
While 6,218 infants died in 2006, 5,892 died in 2007.
Details received under the RTI, which was filed by Chetan
Kothari, show up that the maximum number of deaths took place in
the M-East Ward at 920, followed by 493 deaths in the L Ward.
In fact, the recent Human Development Report (2009),
prepared by the National Resource Centre for Urban Property and
the All-India Institute of Local Self-Government, Mumbai, with
support from the UN Development Programme, the Union ministry of
housing and urban poverty alleviation and the BMC, pointed to
the fact that the M-East Ward, which includes Deonar, Anushakti
Nagar, Trombay and Mankhurd, was ranked the worst.
In fact, of the six wards in the eastern suburbs, five were
below the city’s human development measure (HDM) average,
including the L Ward, which includes Kurla.
Meanwhile, the RTI figures also show that the number of
births fell last year compared with those in the earlier year.
While 1,75,298 births were recorded in 2009, 1,82,759 were
registered in 2008. Experts said the deaths are directly
proportional to the population.
Explaining that the population at the M-East Ward and the L
Ward has been significantly increasing, Dr Gourish Ambe, the
civic executive health officer, said, “The socio-economic
condition in the two wards is not very high either. The slum
population in these areas is about 80-90%.’’
Ambe, though, emphasied that the rise in infant deaths by a
mere 100-odd number is not significant. “The population of the
city increases every year. If the death figures are touching
5,000 or 6,000, a difference of a few 100 is not significant,’’
he said.
However, social experts still see this as a significant
increase. “Although the population increases, and there is a new
entry of migrants, an increase by 100 deaths is still high. One
thing is true, that there is no sign of decline of mortality,’’
said professor R N Sharma of the Centre for Development Studies
at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS). “It’s not
surprising that most deaths are in the M-East Ward because it
has become the dumping grounds of the poor.”
About the decrease in the number of births, Sharma said that
the authenticity of the figures should first be established. “It
is difficult to comment on this because one is not sure if they
are real or projected figures,’’ he said.
A Unicef report titled The State of the World’s Children
2009 showed that while Maharashtra fared better than several
other Indian states, the statistics were alarming — 149 of every
1,00,000 women who go into labour die during childbirth, and 65%
of the total deaths of infants under five years of age occur
within 28 days of their birth.
Dr Indu Khosla, paediatrician who practised in Andheri, said
that 30% of infant deaths occur, as early neo-natal deaths.
“Mostly, they die immediately after birth, or within a month
after birth. The common causes are asphyxia, prematurity and
retardation in growth,” said Khosla. “Then, the common causes of
death within the year since birth are respiratory infections
such as bronchiolosis and pneumonia, followed by diarrhoea and
dehydration,” Khosla added.
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