What is lost and gained in NFHS-6

Good — I now have facts from PIB (Tier 1), Business Standard and Downtoearth (Tier 4), plus the article content. Sufficient to write the note.


What is Lost and Gained in NFHS-6 — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Round Field Period Key Addition
NFHS-1 1992–93 Baseline reproductive/child health
NFHS-2 1998–99 Domestic violence module added
NFHS-3 2005–06 HIV testing, men's health
NFHS-4 2015–16 District-level data for first time
NFHS-5 2019–21 131 indicators; COVID-disrupted
NFHS-6 2023–24 Digital literacy, DBT questions added; 101 indicators

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Social

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. NFHS-6 covers reference year 2023–24; fact sheets released 29 May 2026.
  2. NFHS is commissioned by Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and conducted by IIPS, Mumbai.
  3. NFHS-6 fact sheet has 101 indicators vs. 131 in NFHS-5 — a reduction of 30.
  4. Anaemia data not collected in NFHS-6; shifted to DABS-I under ICMR-NIN.
  5. Indicators dropped from NFHS-6: anaemia, IMR, MMR, sex ratio at birth, sanitation, clean cooking fuel.
  6. New indicators added in NFHS-6: digital literacy, direct benefit transfers (DBT).
  7. Sample size for NFHS-6: approximately 6.8 lakh households.
  8. Manipur is the only State/UT excluded from NFHS-6.
  9. Stunting in children under 5 declined from 35.5% (NFHS-5) to 29.3% (NFHS-6).
  10. Exclusive breastfeeding (infants <6 months) fell by ~8 percentage points in NFHS-6.
  11. Modern contraceptive use fell from 56.4% to 52.7% in NFHS-6.
  12. Institutional births rose from 88.6% to 90.6% between NFHS-5 and NFHS-6.
  13. Only 15.3% of children aged 6–23 months receive an adequate diet (NFHS-6).
  14. NFHS-1 was conducted in 1992–93; NFHS-4 (2015–16) was first to provide district-level data.
  15. IIPS stands for International Institute for Population Sciences, located in Mumbai.

8. Mains Relevance

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The removal of key health indicators such as anaemia and mortality rates from NFHS-6 raises serious concerns about evidence-based health policymaking in India. Critically examine." 2. "Discuss the significance of the National Family Health Survey as a governance tool. How does NFHS-6 compare with its predecessors in terms of scope and policy utility?" 3. "India's NFHS-6 records gains in institutional births and antenatal care but reveals regression in exclusive breastfeeding and contraceptive use. What structural factors explain these contradictory trends?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
POSHAN 2.0 / Anaemia Mukt Bharat NFHS data is the primary benchmark for these nutrition missions; dropping anaemia data directly affects monitoring
National Health Mission (NHM) NFHS indicators directly measure NHM outcomes (maternal health, child nutrition, immunisation)
Demographic Dividend & Population Policy NFHS tracks fertility, contraception, and age-structure data used in demographic projections
Beti Bachao Beti Padhao / PC-PNDT Act Loss of sex ratio at birth indicator weakens tracking of female foeticide trends
Swachh Bharat Mission / PM Ujjwala Sanitation and clean fuel indicators dropped — impacts ODF and clean energy monitoring
Digital India & Jan Dhan-Aadhaar-Mobile (JAM) New NFHS-6 questions on digital literacy and DBT link to financial inclusion monitoring
SDG Localisation in India NFHS is a primary data source for India's SDG 2 (Zero Hunger), SDG 3 (Good Health) reporting to UN

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. IIPS vs. MoHFW confusion: IIPS conducts the survey; MoHFW commissions it. They are different entities — do not conflate implementing and commissioning bodies.
  2. NFHS-5 date error: NFHS-5 was 2019–21 (not 2020–21 or 2021–22) — it straddled COVID-19, hence the elongated field period.
  3. Anaemia dropped ≠ anaemia data unavailable: Anaemia is being measured separately via DABS-I (ICMR-NIN) — not abandoned entirely. A common trap is to say "India no longer measures anaemia."
  4. Exclusive breastfeeding trend confusion: NFHS-6 shows a decline in exclusive breastfeeding — aspirants often assume all child-health indicators improved.
  5. District-level data milestone: This was achieved in NFHS-4 (2015–16), not NFHS-5 or NFHS-6 — a common chronology error.

11. Sources