2. A. CHILD MORBIDITY
• Deviation from a state of physical or
mental well-being as a result of disease,
injury or impairment.
• In a given population morbidity for a given
time, may be measured in terms of
incidence, in terms of prevalence.
3. Total no. of new cases of illness
during a defined period
Population exposed to risk
in the same period
Incidence rate =
4. prevalence
• Prevalence Indicates how common is an
event in a population.
• It is used to measure the frequency of an
illness in existence during a defined period.
• It includes all the cases in the defined
period, new and old case, during the same
period
5. Total no.of new and old cases
found during a specified period
Population exposed to risk
at the same period
Prevalence
rate =
6. B.MORTALITY RATE
• INFANT MORTALITY RATE: it is the
number of infant deaths under one year
of age per 1000live births in one year.
7. Number of deaths under
one year of age
Total live birth in the year
IMR = 1000
10. • globally the under-five child mortality
had reduced only by 48 per
cent…whereas in India by 2013 we had
reduced the under-five child mortality
by 61 per cent,”
11. • India has the highest number of child
deaths in the world, with an estimated
1.2 million deaths in 2015 — 20 per cent
of the 5.9 million global deaths.
12. The fourth Millennium Development Goal
(MDG-4) aimed to reduce mortality —
between 1990 and 2015 — among children
under five by two-thirds.
13. India tops child deaths
due to
#pneumonia
#Diarrhoea,
#congenital
Abnormalities
#Haemorrahgic Diseases
15. • "The current Infant Mortality Rate (IMR)
of India, as per the Sample Registration
System (SRS) 2013, is 40 per 1,000 live
births
• while the Under-5 Mortality Rate
(U5MR) as per SRS 2012 is 52 per 1,000
live births.
16. • Dr Robert Black, Professor at the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore
• USA, said: “In India, more than half of the child
deaths occur in the first month of life, with the
major clinical causes being complications of
prematurity and of delivery. Infectious diseases
remain important causes of death both in the
first month of life and up to five years of age.”
• He added that “vaccines to prevent
pneumococcal pneumonia and rotavirus
diarrhoea are now available and affordable for
universal implementation in India and should
receive priority”.