Number of caesareans was 17.2% for India during the period from Jan 2015 to Dec 2016
A new study based on the data from the National Family and Health Survey has shown that there is a significant increase in the rate of caesarean births in India.
While the WHO recommends the rate of caesarean delivery to be 10-15%, the number was 17.2% for India during the period from Jan 2015 to Dec 2016. This is higher than the rate seen in rich countries such as the Netherlands and Finland. The report says that if this trend continues, India could soon have the largest number of C-section births in the world.

The study noted the rates varied widely across States, with just 5.8% in Nagaland to 57.7% in Telangana. When taking socioeconomic conditions into account, the researchers found that the rate of C-section was as small as 4.4% among the poorest group to 35.9% among the richest quintile.
“More than a third of the births are delivered by caesarean section among the richest quintile and in several states of South India such Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and Telangana – with rates above 50% reported in some districts”, underlines Alexandre Dumont, demographer at the Population and Development Center, The French Research Institute for Development, Paris in a release. He is one of the authors of the study published in JAMA Network Open.
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