India's Infant Mortality Worse than Neighbours: Azad


New Delhi: Admitting that high infant mortality was a big health issue for the nation, Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad Tuesday told parliament that India's situation is worse than most of its neighbours.

Comparing India with its neighbours, the health minister said only Pakistan was comparable to India.

"In India, the infant mortality rate (IMR) is 47 per thousand live births which translates into 12.5 lakh infant deaths per year," Azad said while replying to supplementaries in Rajya Sabha.

"Unfortunately, IMR and Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR) in India is very bad. As bad that it cannot be compared with our neighbouring countries of Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. Pakistan is the only country India can be compared with," he said, replying to a question on recent infant deaths in state-run Behrampore Sadar Hospital in West Bengal's Murshidabad.

Azad also said that the deaths in the hospital were mostly because the infants were already in a critical condition when they were brought to the hospital.

"It is a referral hospital and the infants that are referred are already in critical condition... 70 percent of the mortality is because it is very difficult to save infants with so many problems," he said.

The IMR in West Bengal is 32 per thousand live births which translates into 47,000 infant deaths per year.

 

Source: IANS