Child health status and inequalities in the Indian Sundarbans
Child health is vulnerable in the Sundarbans region due to geographical accessibility problems, climatic challenges and economic vulnerability
Abstract
The Indian Sundarbans is a unique biosphere reserve of mangrove forests spread across more than hundred islands. Most of the region is intersected by tidal rivers or estuaries and innumerable narrow tidal creeks, and made it largely formidable and inhospitable terrain. The Sundarbans is also home of almost 4.5 million people living in abject poverty, chronic deprivation and acute suffering from climatic adversities. The geographical challenges are part of the lives of the Sundarbans鈥� population who subsist primarily on agriculture, fishing and collecting forest products.
Child health is extremely vulnerable in the Indian Sundarbans region due to its spatial geographical accessibility problems, climatic challenges and economic vulnerability. It is important to study child health as today鈥檚 children will be tomorrow鈥檚 citizen. Only if the children are healthy, they will be able join their hands to boost up a country鈥檚 income (GDP) in future. Also from a household鈥檚 perspective, investing in the health of a child will be beneficial for the parents in their old age. Due to children鈥檚 rapid growth and physiological and cognitive development, they are exposed and more vulnerable to physical environmental hazards compared to adults.
The 1,000 days, from start of a woman鈥檚 pregnancy and her child鈥檚 second birthday is a unique window of opportunity to make the children healthier and prosperous in future. This 1,000 day window can also improve society鈥檚 long-term health, well-being and prosperity. Improved child health during these 1,000 days has an intense impact on a child鈥檚 cognitive ability to grow. It also helps to increase productivity of a child and secure economic prosperity of their families and economy. This paper, hence, will try to see the child health status in the first 1,000 days in the Sundarbans. It will also try to see the inequalities in child health in this area.
Citation
Patra, Nilanjan; Mandal, Arnab. (2016) Child Health Status and Inequalities in the Indian Sundarbans. International Journal of Child Health and Human Development. Vol. 9, No. 2
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