The India State-Level Disease Burden Report, a first-of-its-kind
assessment of causes for diseases in each State from 1990 to 2016, was
released recently. A team of scientists evaluated the diseases causing
the most premature deaths and ill-health in each State. It found out,
for instance, that life expectancy at birth in the country has improved
significantly.
“In the most developed States this transition took place about 30 years ago, but in the poorest States this transition has taken place only over the past few years,” the report said.
The results show that non-communicable disease and injuries have together overtaken infectious and childhood diseases in terms of disease burden in every State, but the magnitude of this transition varies markedly between the poor States and the more developed States, according to the report which is now being used as an important tool for health planners in India to improve health of the people more effectively.
The technical paper was published the same day on this data in the journal The Lancet, and an online open-access interactive visualisation tool was released that allows easy understanding of the disease burden details in every State and their trends over a quarter century. The report is the result of two years of intense scientific work and collaborative effort. The Global Burden of Disease methodology was used for this analysis, which is the most widely used disease burden estimation approach globally.
Another important aspect of this major collaborative effort is that scientific capacity is being enhanced in India to generate and analyse large-scale health data, as well as to utilise it to improve our health.
What is worrying?
However,
the report indicated many health inequalities among States, noting that
while there was a fall in the under-five mortality in every State there
was also a four-fold difference in the rate of improvement among them.
“The per person burden from many of the leading infectious and
non-communicable diseases varied 5-10 times between States,” the report
pointed out with researchers attributing this to differences in the
development status, environment, lifestyle patterns, preventive health
measures and curative health services between the States.“In the most developed States this transition took place about 30 years ago, but in the poorest States this transition has taken place only over the past few years,” the report said.
Who suffers most?
It
explained that infectious and childhood diseases continue to be
significant problems in the poor Empowered Action Group States of north
India (Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha,
Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand and Assam), which still
contributes 37-43% of the total disease burden. These diseases are
responsible for the inordinately high burden of premature deaths and
morbidity suffered by children under five years of age in these States.The results show that non-communicable disease and injuries have together overtaken infectious and childhood diseases in terms of disease burden in every State, but the magnitude of this transition varies markedly between the poor States and the more developed States, according to the report which is now being used as an important tool for health planners in India to improve health of the people more effectively.
What led to the report?
It
was the result of a collaboration between the Indian Council of Medical
Research, the Public Health Foundation of India, the Institute for
Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, and
senior experts and stakeholders from about 100 institutions across
India. The India State-Level Disease Burden Initiative was led by Dr.
Lalit Dandona, who serves as the director of this initiative, and was
guided by Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, Deputy Director- General, World Health
Organisation.The technical paper was published the same day on this data in the journal The Lancet, and an online open-access interactive visualisation tool was released that allows easy understanding of the disease burden details in every State and their trends over a quarter century. The report is the result of two years of intense scientific work and collaborative effort. The Global Burden of Disease methodology was used for this analysis, which is the most widely used disease burden estimation approach globally.
How will it help?
The
India State-Level Disease Burden Initiative will update estimates
annually for each State based on new data that become available. It will
also provide more detailed findings: for example, next year it plans to
report the rural-urban differences in disease burden for each State.
Detailed topic-specific reports and publications will be produced for
major diseases and risk factors for deeper insights to plan their
control. The policy applications of these findings include planning of
State health budgets, prioritisation of interventions relevant to each
State, informing the government’s Health Assurance Mission in each
State, monitoring of health-related Sustainable Development Goals
targets, and assessing the impact of large-scale interventions based on
time trends of disease burden. In addition, the data gaps identified in
this estimation process will inform which areas of the health
information system of India need to be strengthened.Another important aspect of this major collaborative effort is that scientific capacity is being enhanced in India to generate and analyse large-scale health data, as well as to utilise it to improve our health.
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