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Decline of Fertility Rate in India Says National Family Health Survey-5

by Dr. Divya Lalithaon September 6, 2022 at 1:07 PM
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Fertility Rate of India Recorded by NFHS-5 Survey

The National Family Health Survey 2019-21 (NFHS-5), offers data on India's population, its health, and nutritional status of each state and union territory(1). One aspect to look at is the Total Fertility Rate(TFR) of Indian women in the recently published report is that, between the age group of 15-49 years, the recorded rate was 1.99, which is below the rate of 2.18 in the NFHS-4.


TFR among urban women was found to be 1.63 and among rural women to be 2.14. In rural areas, the TFR has considerably dropped from 3.7 children per woman in 1992-93.

‘Fertility in India declines to two children per woman, disarming the country's population boom. Is the country employing sterilization and contraceptives to achieve its fertility milestone?’

In urban areas the rates had dropped from 2.7 children in 1992-93.

Only five states namely Bihar (2.98), Meghalaya (2.91), Uttar Pradesh (2.35), Jharkhand (2.26), and Manipur (2.17) have fertility rates that are higher than the replacement rate (2.1).

Replacement level of the total fertility rate is the average number of children born to a woman during the period when a population is exactly replacing itself from one generation to the next without any migration.

The total fertility rate of the nation has decreased across all the religious communities, but the Muslims have had the largest decline, from 4.4 in NFHS 1 to 2.3 in NFHS 5.

Among the religious communities, the Muslims have had the greatest decline in fertility rate during the past 20 years. The community's fertility rate decreased from 2.6 in 2015-16 and in just a few years it fell by 0.3 maintaining the long-term downward trend. But still, the Muslim population continues to have the greatest fertility rate compared with other religious groups.

As recorded by the NFHS 5, the fertility rate of the Hindus was 1.94, followed by the Christians at 1.88, the Sikh and the Jain community at 1.6, and the lowest among the Buddhist and neo-Buddhist groups at 1.39.

As the women's educational levels increased, their number of children decreased. Women who did not have any school education had about 2.8 children, whereas women with an education at school level had an average of 1.8 children(1,2).

About the National Family Health Survey 2019-21 (NFHS-5)

The National Family Health Survey 2019-21 (NFHS-5), offers data on India's population, its health, and nutritional status of each state/union territory(1).

By including new dimensions like death registration, pre-school education, expanded child immunisation domains, components of micronutrients for children, menstrual hygiene, frequency of alcohol and tobacco use, additional components of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), and an expanded age range for measuring hypertension and diabetes among all aged 15 years and above, the scope of NFHS-5 is expanded in comparison to the earlier round of the survey (NFHS-4).

Need of the Hour

Health executives have frequently remarked that no government in the world could build schools and other facilities at the rate of the approximately 25 million babies being born each year in India. The health administration has spent years attempting to stabilize the situation, and it appears that time has finally come (3). The need of the hour is to do more and the following action points can help:

Is the Drop in Total Fertility Rate a Cause of Concern?

Over the last 70 years, there has been a 50% decline in fertility rates worldwide and the reasons have been women's empowerment with education, lower child mortality and the increasing cost of living. The combination of lower fertility rates along with increasing life expectancies around the world, is creating an aging population. Overall this puts pressure on the healthcare systems of the countries(4).

Public health professionals are pausing to process this information from India because it shows that the population is stabilizing. Certain states are edging upward, while others are primarily heading downward, and the trend is towards equilibrium.

A number of variables, including improved contraception measures and government health and family welfare programmes, are responsible for the decline in fertility.

Like China, India too should see the population declining in the coming decades to its current peak of about 1.4 billion. This will mean that India's demographic dividend will last for another two to three decades and after that it will have to cope with the aging population and slowing down of economic growth like some of the other developed countries. So India has another 25 years or so to become a super economic power house.

References:
  1. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5) - (http://rchiips.org/nfhs/NFHS-5Reports/NFHS-5_INDIA_REPORT.pdf)
  2. National Family Health Survey 5 - (https:prsindia.org/policy/vital-stats/national-family-health-survey-5)
  3. What the fertility rate decline means for India - (https:www.thehindubusinessline.com/blexplainer/what-the-fertility-rate-decline-means-for-india/article37996061.ece)
  4. The Effect of Fertility Reduction on Economic Growth - (https:www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4267474/)
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