New research suggests that literacy may have a greater impact on enhancing public health in India as opposed to good income
![Literacy, More Than Income can Help Enhance Public Health in India Literacy, More Than Income can Help Enhance Public Health in India](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/teacher.jpg)
Researchers said that a poor district can nonetheless enjoy relatively good public health if it has a high literacy rate.
Literacy acts as a base, enabling populations to understand medicine labeling, access healthcare, and engage with public health programmes.
Using data on income, education, and under-five and infant mortality, the researchers suggested that policymakers concerned with public health should focus on literacy levels rather than average income.
Models estimate that for the "typical" Indian district in the early 2000s, the poverty gap would have had to be reduced by 25 percent to save one child per thousand live births, whereas a mere 4 percent increase in literacy rate would have had the same effect.
And at the level of India's 35 states and Union Territories, literacy is the only significant predictor of public health - even poverty gap is not a reliable predictor.
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"Higher average income is a statistical red herring: it contributes to better public health mainly to the extent that it reflects high literacy and low poverty," he said.
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Source-ANI