This story is from August 13, 2017

Gorakhpur IMR as high as in top 20 countries

Gorakhpur IMR as high as in top 20 countries
Lucknow: If Gorakhpur was a country, it would have been among 20 nations with the highest infant mortality rate (IMR) in the world. Data from health department shows 62 out of 1,000 children born in Gorakhpur die before turning one. Against this, 48 out of 1,000 infants die in UP and 40 out of 1,000 in India. But if compared to the global scale using data from the CIA (Central Intelligence Agency, US)’s records, infant mortality rate of Gorakhpur is as high as of 20 countries with the highest.

“With an IMR of 62, Gorakhpur with 44.5 lakh population would be Number 18, replacing the Republic of Gambia in West Africa, with population of 19.18 lakh,” said health activist Bobby Ramakant.
With IMR of 62.90 and 64.60, Zambia and South Sudan give competition to Gorakhpur. Topping the CIA list is Afganistan, with an IMR of 112. Mali with 100, Somalia with 96, Central African Republic with 88 and Guinea Bissau with 87 are on the subsequent ranks.
Gorakhpur’s under-5 mortality is way ahead of the national and state average. Gorakhpur scores 76 on the count, while India’s under-5 mortality rate is 50, against UP’s rate of 62.
Health commentator Aarti Dhar said, “The high IMR is because of factors like malnutrition, incomplete immunisation, open defecation and unsafe drinking water.” Citing the fourth National Family Health Survey figures, she said over 35% kids in Gorakhpur are underweight, while 42% are stunted. The district also lags on the immunisation front—one in three children doesn’t complete the mandatory immunisation cycle. Only 35% households have toilets which suggests high rate of open defecation, resulting in 25% kids in the district suffering from diarrhoea.

Paediatricians said malnutrition and incomplete immunisation make children vulnerable towards diseases like encephalitis. “Malnourished children have lower resistance to infection and are more likely to die from common childhood ailments like diarrhoeal diseases and respiratory infections and for those who survive, frequent illness saps their nutritional status, locking them into a vicious cycle of recurring sickness, faltering growth and diminished learning ability,” said Prof Shally Awasthi, faculty member King George’s Medical University.
Doctors at BRD Medical College, Gorakhpur, requesting anonymity, said 70% encephalitis-hit kids were malnourished. Gorakhpur-based social activist Rajesh Mani said, “Children have died in Gorakhpur for years and there is no dearth of data to stress the dire need to save them.”
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About the Author
Shailvee Sharda

Journalist with the Times of India since August 2004, Shailvee Sharda writes on Health, Culture and Politics. Having covered the length and breadth of UP, she brings stories that define elements like human survival and its struggle, faiths, perceptions and thought processes that govern the decision making in everyday life, during big events such as an election, tangible and non-tangible cultural legacy and the cost and economics of well-being. She keenly follows stories that celebrate hope and life in general.

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