Study finds low birth weight from 4 states makes up half of India's cases
The
team emphasised the need for sustained efforts to address maternal and neonatal
health disparities, along with improved data collection at healthcare
facilities to ensure high-quality data that can inform decision-making across
India
Low birth weight is likely to be more
prevalent among non-weighed children since weighing correlates strongly with
healthcare infrastructure and being born in a health facility. Also, (a) low
socioeconomic status is linked to both lack of access to healthcare and low
birth weight |Image used for representational purpose only |
Cases of a low weight at birth from
four states -- Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra, and West Bengal -- account
for nearly half of India's cases, despite an overall progress in lowering rates
over the last 30 years, an analysis of the National Family Health Survey shows.
The findings are published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) Global Health.
Low birth weight tied to health disparities
Having a low birth weight -- under 2.5
kg -- can often signal a mother's underlying health issues and poor nutrition, and has been linked with problems in
the child's cognitive development and a vulnerability to chronic conditions in
later life.
Analysing data gathered from all five
waves of the national survey, researchers from Duke and Harvard universities in
the US and institutes in South Korea found that overall, the prevalence of low
birth weight in India fell by eight percentage points -- from 26 in 1993 to 18
in 2021.
State-wise, the average prevalence was
seen to decline across the five waves of the survey from 25 per cent in 1993
and 1999 to 20 per cent in 2006, and 16 per cent in 2021, when the last wave
concluded.
Analysis of data from the fifth wave
(2019-21) suggests that 42 lakh babies were born with a low weight in a single
year, almost half (47 per cent) of which came from only four states -- Uttar
Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra and West Bengal.
Prevalence in 1993 was found to be the
highest in Rajasthan (48 per cent), while in 2021, Punjab and Delhi saw the
highest prevalence at 22 per cent. States such as Mizoram and Nagaland had the
lowest prevalence of low birth weight in 1993 and in 2021 as well.
The authors wrote, "The overall
prevalence of low birth weight in India declined from 26 per cent to 18 per
cent during the period. The 2019-21 survey revealed that four states, Uttar
Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra, and West Bengal, accounted for almost half of all
low-birth-weight births in India." The data from the fifth wave also
showed that babies having both a lower weight and a smaller-than-average size
at birth were "considerably more likely" to be born to women with
little or no formal education and from the poorest households.
Call for better health data and action
"Low birth weight is likely to be
more prevalent among non-weighed children since weighing correlates strongly
with healthcare infrastructure and being born in a health facility. Also, (a)
low socioeconomic status is linked to both lack of access to healthcare and low
birth weight," the team wrote.
The results "point to a general
decline in the prevalence of low birth weight and convergence between states
over time," they said.
The team also highlighted the need for
continued efforts in addressing maternal and neonatal health disparities and
called for improved data collection at healthcare facilities, which can provide
quality data for decision-making across India.
Recorded births were found to increase
from 48,959 in 1993 to 2,32,920 in 2021. Proportion of babies weighed at birth
increased over time, resulting in 7,992 being included in the analysis in 1993
(16 per cent) to 209,266 in 2021 (90 per cent), the authors said.
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