
Newly released United
Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs ( UN-DESA) data
for 150 countries over 40 years shows that India and China are the only two
countries in the world where female infant mortality is higher than male infant
mortality in the 2000s. In China, there are 76 male infant deaths for every 100
female infant deaths compared with 122 male infant deaths for every 100 female
infant deaths in the developing world as a whole.
The released data has found that India has a better infant mortality sex
ratio than China, with 97 male infant deaths for every 100 female, but this is
still not in tune with the global trend, or with its neighbours Sri
Lanka (125) or Pakistan
(120).
When it comes to the child mortality sex ratio, however, India is far and
away the world's worst. In the 2000s, there were 56 male child deaths for every
100 female, compared with 111 in the developing world. This ratio has got
progressively worse since the 1970s in India, even as Pakistan, Sri Lanka,
Egypt and Iraq
improved.
The UN report is clear that high girl child mortality is explained by
socio-cultural values. So strong is the biological advantage for girls in early
childhood that higher mortality among girls should be seen as "a powerful
warning that differential treatment or access to resources is putting girls at
a disadvantage", the report says.
"Higher female mortality from age 1 onwards clearly indicated sustained
discrimination," says P Arokiasamy, professor of development studies at
Mumbai's International Institute for Population Studies, who has studied gender
differentials in child mortality in India. "Such neglect and
discrimination can be in three areas: food and nutrition, healthcare and
emotional wellbeing. Of these, neglect of the healthcare of the girl child is
the most direct determinant of mortality," says Arokisamy. Studies have
shown that health-related neglect may involve waiting longer before taking a
sick girl to a doctor than a sick boy, and is also reflected in lower rates of
immunization for girls than boys.

No comments:
Post a Comment