Skip to content
  • English
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
Daily News India

Daily News India

Just another WordPress site

  • English
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • National
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Toggle search form
  • Venugopal Gold Palace Crowned India’s Iconic Gold Jewelry Store of the year at Indian Icon Awards 2024 Business
  • Mahima Chaudhry launched the Motion poster of Neera Arya Entertainment
  • Take a Look into the AlmaBetter’s Pay-After-Placement Courses for Web Dev & Data Science Education
  • Radiant Digital Solutions Unveils Cutting-Edge Office Space to signify continued growth and expansion Business
  • Talent from Showbiz Industries Got Felicitated At Mid Day International Icon Awards 2021 Lifestyle
  • Tesla Picks IPS Academy’s Himanshu Singh for Germany Job, Offers Lucrative Rs. 4 Crore Package. Education
  • Shining In The Light Of A Successful Festive Season Business
  • Celebrating Excellence – India Star Community Announces Top 10 Dynamic Woman Leaders – 2024 on International Women’s Day-2024 Business

World Population Day: Demographic Trends and the Future of India’s healthcare

Posted on July 11, 2022 By

 As articulated in the WHO Constitution, “the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of the fundamental rights of every human being.”

New Delhi: Demographic trends intertwined with economic, social and political factors eventually shape a country’s developmental outcomes. Today, as we celebrate World Population Day, our focus must be on our healthcare sector. A robust and resilient healthcare system will make us significantly more prepared for the unexpected.

 As our Hon’ble Prime Minister Sh. Narendra Modi has rightly said, “health does not simply mean freedom from diseases. A healthy life is every person’s right.”

 By and large, achievements in key health indicators such as child nutrition, maternal mortality, infant mortality, institutional deliveries and longevity are impressive. Public healthcare interventions in the form of policies and programmes such as POSHAN 2.0, PMJAY, Janani Suraksha Yojana, and the Universal Immunisation programmes, among others, have been fruitful in this regard. Digital healthcare, telehealth services and internet-based interventions for psychosocial support have also been incorporated. Numerous PPP interventions have played a pivotal role in improvising facilities and strengthening people’s confidence in the public healthcare system. However, our achievements, in many regards, have been uneven across states.

 Jennifer D Scuibba, in her work ‘8 Billion and Counting: How Sex, Death, and Migration Shape Our World’ wrote, “the twenty-first century “is less a story about exponential population growth than it is a story about differential growth —marked by a stark divide between the world’s richest and poorest.”

Interestingly, the demographic trends in India are also diverse both among states and within states. 

As specified by the National Family Health Survey, conducted by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (MoHFW), the TFR has further declined from 2.2 to2.0 at the national level between NFHS 4 and NFHS 5.

Despite a perceptible decline in TFR, states such as Bihar, Meghalaya, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand and Manipur continue to have above replacement levels of fertility. Moreover, three of these five states have also been accorded the lowest ranks in the State Health Index produced by the NitiAayog, in consultation with the MoHFW and the World Bank.

 The need of the hour is a comprehensive understanding of regional dynamics and factoring them for proactive decision-making to improve public spending and infrastructural investments in the healthcare sector. A multi-layered approach is imperative to tackle regional inequalities which confront India. Our highest priority should be universal access, affordability, inclusivity and equitability.

 In addition, the United Nations-Habitat World Cities Report 2022 noted that the percentage of the population in India at mid-year residing in the urban area would be 43.2 per cent. India’s urban population is estimated to be 675,456,000 in 2035, growing from 483,099,000 in 2020 to 542,74300 in 2025 and 607,342,000 in 2030. The report said that “cities are here to stay, and the future of humanity is undoubtedly urban.” According to Maimunah Mohd. Sharif, U.N. Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of U.N. Habitat, urbanisation remains a powerful 21st-century mega trend. India’s least urbanised states are Himachal Pradesh and Bihar at 10.03 and 11.29 per cent, respectively. The urban population of Telangana is likely to reach 50 per cent by 2025 from the current 46.8 per cent.

 These trends have far-reaching challenges for our health sector. A rapidly growing urban population can be a burden or a blessing. We must ensure it does not exacerbate problems such as overcrowding and overburdening our existing healthcare institutions. Sustainable urbanisation is the key to development. Initiatives must aim at strengthening institutional mechanisms and infrastructural capacities. Every citizen must be guaranteed access to primary healthcare and social services, with particular attention to the needs of the vulnerable for health, education, water and housing. 

 Partnerships and synergy with the community, local bodies, NGOs, health service providers and other stakeholders must be encouraged for planning and implementation.

About the Author

Jayaa Auplish was a research scholar at the University of Delhi and is currently a freelance writer. Her research interests are politics and governance.

Health Tags:Healthcare

Post navigation

Previous Post: Power of the Sacred Lotus Seed – MITCHELL USA’s revolutionary ingredient behind its AGELESS Range
Next Post: CII hosts the 2nd Edition of Cloud Summit

Related Posts

  • Dr Jay Goyal Honoured with Lokshahi Aarogya Ratan Samman 2024 for Excellence in Eye Care Health
  • Doctor’s Day 2025: Leading Health Experts Offer Practical Tips for Lifelong Wellness Health
  • Human BioSciences Raises Awareness on Burn Injuries and Life-Saving Solutions Health
  • Aansh IVF Chandrapur First in Central India to Deploy Garbha.ai with 94 Percent Accuracy Rate Health
  • Dr. Harshmeet Arora Was Given The Healthcare And Fitness Award Health
  • Insights from Leading Health Experts on World Health Day 2024: My Health, My Right Health

Recent Posts

  • Bhavika Maheshwari of Surat raises Indian Flag Across the Asia with Cultural Impact
  • New wave of Lab Grown Diamond Jewelry led by Ivana Jewels
  • XLRI Jamshedpur announces admissions to 47th batch of Postgraduate Certificate in Business Management
  • Electrent Energy Enters Commercial Power Backup Market; Launches High-Capacity Lithium Technology Based Inverters to Replace Diesel Generators
  • SRH University and SAP Labs India Ink Agreement, Extending Strategic Partnership to Bridge German Academic Excellence with India’s Tech Ecosystem

Recent Comments

  • Unknown on Participants Reap Rewards in Wellman’s 8-Week Digital Campaign: IPL Tickets, Autographed Virat Kohli Merchandise, and More!
  • IMS Ghaziabad (University Courses Campus) MIB Students Explores New Horizons with IIP-2024 at RIT, Dubai Education
  • Unveiling Romance: Siddharth and Aditi Rao Hydari shine bright in custom-made rings by Andal Jewels for their engagement Business
  • Asian Granito India Ltd Welcomes Bollywood Star Ranbir Kapoor as Brand Ambassador Business
  • Khesari Lal Yadav inaugurated Ashok Prasad Abhisheks new production house, iEve Era Films Entertainment
  • Amantran Jewels’ Timeless Elegance: The New Single Stone Collection Business
  • Rajeev Mahavir’s ‘SUR Music’ Launches in India with Musical Legends and Global Vision Entertainment
  • Indian genz and millennial love for metal now extends to cards Business
  • 78-year-old’s, Failing Valves, but a Beating Comeback achieved with HVS Symbiosis’ MyCLIP Press Release

Copyright © 2026 Daily News India.

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme