India's Healthcare Milestones: MMR Drops 42 Points, TB Falls 21%, Says Nadda

Union Minister JP Nadda highlighted India's significant healthcare progress at a Health Outreach program in Thiruvananthapuram. He cited data showing a 42-point decline in maternal mortality and a 73% reduction in infant mortality. Nadda also noted a 21% decrease in tuberculosis incidence, surpassing the global average, and an 80% decline in malaria cases. He emphasized the role of the National Health Mission and ongoing campaigns like TB-mukt Bharat.

Key Points: Nadda Highlights India's Healthcare Gains in Mortality, TB & Malaria

  • Maternal mortality fell 42 points
  • Infant mortality down 73%
  • TB incidence dropped 21%
  • Malaria cases in India declined 80%
3 min read

Keralam: Union Minister JP Nadda participates in Health Outreach program in Thiruvananthapuram

Union Minister JP Nadda cites UN & WHO data showing major declines in maternal & infant mortality, TB incidence, and malaria cases in India.

"India is on a remarkable healthcare journey! - JP Nadda"

Thiruvananthapuram, April 5

Union Minister JP Nadda on Sunday participated in the Health Outreach program held in Thiruvananthapuram.

Sharing his views on X, he wrote, "India is on a remarkable healthcare journey! Maternal mortality has fallen by 42 points, infant mortality by 73%, and TB incidence has dropped 21%--surpassing the global average. The National Health Mission is transforming lives, creating a healthier, stronger future for every citizen."

While addressing the outreach programme, he openly spoke about the decline in the maternal mortality rate, infant mortality rate, and TB elimination.

"If I talk about the National Health Mission, I would like to share with you that the institutional delivery has increased from 79% to 89%. If I talk about the decline in the maternal mortality ratio (MMR), the decline is 42 points, and according and it's not my report, according to the UN report, the neonatal mortality rate declined by 70%. It has declined by 70%. The under-five mortality rate has declined by 79%. The infant mortality rate has declined by 73%. And if I talk about disease elimination, you'll be happy to know that we are a polio-free country, we are a neonatal maternal tetanus-free country, trachoma is no longer a public concern now, and next year, the coming year, we will be free from Kala-azar," said Nadda.

He further stated that, "According to the World Health Organisation's World Malaria Report, we have one-sixth of the world's population, and only 0.7% of global cases of malaria are reported in India. 0.7%. The decline in cases is 80%, and the decline in deaths is approximately 78% that we have to understand."

He also talked about TB and malaria, citing the decrease in tuberculosis and reduction in TB mortality.

"If I talk about malaria, if I talk about it and if I talk about TB elimination, the World Health Organisation. It's not my report; it's the World Health Organisation's report that the decrease in the incidence of tuberculosis in India is 21%. The reduction in TB mortality is 25%, the treatment coverage is 92%, and the global treatment coverage is 78%. Now, as far as the decrease in the decline in the incidence rate is concerned, when we are on 21%, the global decline is only 12%. So we are taking the lead that we have to understand. And if I talk about the innovative diagnostic treatment successes, India is 90%, and the global rate is 88%," he stated.

He asserted that we have launched a TB-mukt Bharat campaign for 90 days, and 1,58,000 villages and urban wards have been identified as the high-focus areas where the vulnerable population is, and we are screening.

"I will share with you when I come back after the results and meet you all, as we have been able to successfully screen up to 80% in these areas, 1,58,000 urban villages and wards that we are going to do," he added.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see a Union Minister visiting Kerala and talking about health. The stats are impressive on paper, but the ground reality in many rural areas is still tough. Hope the outreach programs actually reach the most vulnerable and aren't just for show.
A
Arjun K
TB elimination is a massive challenge. The 90-day campaign sounds ambitious. If we can screen 80% in high-focus areas, that's a solid start. Our ASHA workers are the real heroes behind these public health successes. 🙏
S
Sarah B
The data comparing India's progress to global averages is quite striking. A 21% decline in TB incidence vs. 12% globally shows focused policy can work. However, sustaining this momentum and ensuring equitable healthcare across all states is the next big test.
M
Meera T
Becoming polio-free and tackling diseases like Kala-azar are achievements every Indian should be proud of. But we must not become complacent. The focus should now shift to non-communicable diseases like diabetes and hypertension, which are rising rapidly.
V
Vikram M
While the numbers are good, I wish the minister had also spoken about the doctor-patient ratio and the shortage of specialists in district hospitals. Primary health centers are often understaffed. The mission's success depends on its weakest link.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50