NFHS-6 reveals progress amid nutrition challenges


NFHS-6: Progress Amid Nutrition Challenges — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Round Year Key Focus Introduced
NFHS-1 1992–93 Baseline fertility, mortality, MCH
NFHS-2 1998–99 Domestic violence module added
NFHS-3 2005–06 HIV/AIDS, men's module
NFHS-4 2015–16 District-level data (640 districts)
NFHS-5 2019–21 Expanded to 707 districts; COVID disruption
NFHS-6 2023–24 715 districts; reduced to 101 indicators; anaemia shifted to DABS-I

4. Core Static Facts

Survey Architecture

Key Nutrition Indicators (NFHS-5 → NFHS-6)

Indicator NFHS-5 NFHS-6 Trend
Stunting (under-5, % low height-for-age) 35.5% 29.3% ↓ Improved [S2][S4]
Wasting (under-5, % low weight-for-height) ~19% 19% → No change [S2][S4]
Severe wasting 7.7% 5.2% ↓ Improved [S2]
Underweight (under-5) 32.1% 31.8% → Marginal ↓ [S2]
Adequate diet (children 6–23 months) 15.3% Critically low [S2]
Overweight/obese women 24.0% 30.7% ↑ Risen [S3]
Overweight/obese men 22.9% 27.3% ↑ Risen [S3]

Maternal & Institutional Health Indicators

Indicator NFHS-5 NFHS-6
Institutional deliveries 88.6% 90.6% [S3]
Public facility births (of all births) 58% [S4]
Skilled birth attendance 91.3% [S3]
Antenatal care (≥1 visit) 92.6% 95.9% [S3]

Immunisation

Anaemia — Critical Methodological Change


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Administrative

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. NFHS-6 was released on 29 May 2026 by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. [S1]
  2. Nodal agency for all NFHS rounds: International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS), Mumbai. [S1]
  3. NFHS-6 covered ~6.79 lakh households across 715 districts. [S1]
  4. NFHS-6 tracks 101 indicators — down from 131 in NFHS-5. [S2]
  5. Stunting (under-5 children) declined from 35.5% (NFHS-5) to 29.3% (NFHS-6). [S2]
  6. Wasting (under-5) remained unchanged at approximately 19% despite years of intervention. [S2]
  7. Severe wasting declined from 7.7% to 5.2%. [S2]
  8. Only 15.3% of children aged 6–23 months receive an adequate diet — the starkest finding on feeding practices. [S2]
  9. Anaemia data is NOT part of NFHS-6; it is being tracked through the new Diet and Biomarkers Survey in India (DABS-I). [S2]
  10. Institutional deliveries: 90.6% (up from 88.6% in NFHS-5); public facilities account for 58% of all births. [S3][S4]
  11. Rotavirus vaccination coverage more than doubled: 36.4% → 85.4%. [S3]
  12. Full immunisation coverage (children 12–23 months): 87.1% in NFHS-6. [S3]
  13. Overweight/obese women rose from 24.0% to 30.7% — signalling the double burden of malnutrition. [S3]
  14. NFHS-6 was conducted during 2023–24 (fieldwork period). [S1]
  15. Underweight (under-5) declined only marginally: 32.1% → 31.8% — statistically near-flat. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers & Syllabus Headings

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-I Population and associated issues; poverty and developmental issues
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development; issues arising out of their design and implementation; welfare schemes for vulnerable sections
GS-III Food security; issues of buffer stocks and food security; technology missions

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "NFHS-6 suggests that India's gains in child nutrition are driven by healthcare access rather than dietary quality. Critically analyse this observation and suggest policy interventions to address the dietary gap." (GS-II / GS-III)

  2. "The double burden of malnutrition — simultaneous prevalence of undernutrition and obesity — is increasingly visible in India. Examine its causes, consequences, and the adequacy of existing policy responses." (GS-II / GS-I)

  3. "Discuss the significance of district-level data in the National Family Health Survey for evidence-based policymaking in India. How does NFHS-6 improve on its predecessors in this regard?" (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why It Connects
POSHAN 2.0 / National Nutrition Mission India's primary policy response to NFHS-identified nutrition deficits; convergence with ICDS and Anganwadi
Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) Directly explains NFHS-6's institutional delivery improvement; conditional cash transfer design
Anaemia Mukt Bharat (AMB) NFHS-6's exclusion of anaemia data directly impacts AMB monitoring; understand the 6 × 6 × 6 strategy
Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) Explains the rotavirus and full-immunisation gains in NFHS-6; cold-chain infrastructure
SDG 2 (Zero Hunger) & SDG 3 (Good Health) NFHS-6 is India's primary tracking mechanism for these SDGs
National Health Policy 2017 Sets the institutional birth, maternal, and nutrition targets that NFHS-6 measures against
Double Burden of Malnutrition / Nutrition Transition Rising obesity alongside stunting/wasting in NFHS-6; links to ultra-processed food regulation
Diet and Biomarkers Survey (DABS-I) Replacement platform for anaemia and micronutrient data dropped from NFHS-6

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "NFHS-6 measured anaemia"FALSE. Anaemia was removed from NFHS-6 and transferred to DABS-I. Confusing this with NFHS-5's anaemia data (57.2% children, 52.2% women) is a common MCQ trap. [S2]

  2. Confusing stunting with wasting: Stunting = low height-for-age (chronic/long-term deprivation); Wasting = low weight-for-height (acute/recent deprivation). NFHS-6 improved stunting but NOT wasting. [S2][S4]

  3. Nodal agency confusion: NFHS is implemented by IIPS, Mumbai — not ICMR, not MOSPI, not NITI Aayog. Ministry is MoHFW.

  4. Wrong district/household count: NFHS-6 covers 715 districts and ~6.79 lakh households — distinct from NFHS-5 (707 districts). Treat these as separate facts. [S1]

  5. Attributing institutional delivery improvement solely to JSY: NFHS-6 data shows public facilities account for 58% of institutional deliveries — the remaining ~33% are in private facilities. Conflating "institutional" with "public/government" distorts equity analysis. [S4]


11. Sources


Note: Primary quantitative facts sourced from PIB (Tier 1) and verified against Business Standard and The Hindu reporting. The article excerpt by Swaminathan & Narayanan (The Hindu, 19 June 2026) is treated as Tier 4 and used for qualitative analysis.