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
- NFHS-6 (National Family Health Survey, Round 6) covers data from 2023–24, released by the Union Health Ministry on 29 May 2026. [S1]
- The survey's preliminary fact sheet contains 101 indicators, down sharply from 131 in NFHS-5, making it structurally thinner than its predecessor. [S2]
- Critical indicators — anaemia, infant mortality rate (IMR), maternal mortality rate (MMR), sex ratio at birth, sanitation, and clean cooking fuel — have been dropped from the NFHS-6 fact sheet. [S3]
- UPSC relevance: directly tests GS-II (health governance, welfare schemes) and GS-I (social issues); data heavily quoted in policy and essay contexts.
2. Why in the News
- 29 May 2026: Union Health Ministry released NFHS-6 preliminary fact sheets covering 2023–24. [S1]
- Debate erupted over the removal of 30 key indicators compared to NFHS-5 — especially anaemia, which had been a flagship monitoring tool under POSHAN 2.0 and Anaemia Mukt Bharat. [S3]
- Anaemia measurement is being shifted to the Diet and Biomarkers Survey in India (DABS-I), led by ICMR's National Institute of Nutrition. [S3]
- Survey excludes Manipur due to ongoing civil conflict. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- NFHS inception: 1992–93 (NFHS-1); modelled on the global Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) framework.
- Commissioned by: Ministry of Health and Family Welfare; conducted by: International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS), Mumbai. [S1]
- Round chronology:
| 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 |
- NFHS-5 covered ~6.4 lakh households; NFHS-6 expanded to ~6.8 lakh households. [S2]
- NFHS data feed into SDG monitoring, NITI Aayog health indices, and World Bank micro-data library. [S4]
4. Core Static Facts
- Full name: National Family Health Survey — 6 (NFHS-6)
- Reference year: 2023–24
- Release date (fact sheets): 29 May 2026 [S1]
- Implementing agency: IIPS, Mumbai (designated by MoHFW) [S1]
- Parent ministry: Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
- Coverage: All States and UTs except Manipur [S2]
- Sample size: ~6.8 lakh households [S2]
- Indicators: 101 (vs. 131 in NFHS-5) [S2]
- New additions: Questions on digital literacy and Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT) [S2]
- Dropped indicators: Anaemia, IMR, MMR, sex ratio at birth, sanitation, clean cooking fuel [S3]
- Anaemia responsibility shifted to: DABS-I (Diet and Biomarkers Survey in India) under ICMR-NIN [S3]
- Funding framework: Linked to National Health Mission (NHM) data architecture
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Social
- Gains in maternal care: Mothers receiving ≥4 antenatal check-ups rose ~7 percentage points from NFHS-5. [S2]
- Institutional births increased from 88.6% (NFHS-5) to 90.6%; births attended by skilled personnel up to 91.3%. [S3]
- Women's Internet use registered a measurable increase — signals narrowing of digital gender gap. [S2]
- Exclusive breastfeeding of infants under 6 months fell ~8 percentage points — a significant regression. [S2]
Economic
- Modern contraceptive use declined from 56.4% to 52.7% — potentially affects fertility-rate-linked economic planning. [S2]
- Introduction of DBT questions signals intent to track welfare transfer effectiveness through household surveys.
- Only 15.3% of children aged 6–23 months receive an adequate diet despite large public expenditure on nutrition schemes (POSHAN 2.0, PM-POSHAN). [S3]
Administrative / Governance
- Dropping anaemia data from NFHS weakens annual benchmarking under Anaemia Mukt Bharat (target: reduce anaemia prevalence by 3 percentage points per year). [S3]
- Exclusion of Manipur creates a data gap for a conflict-affected state with high public health needs. [S2]
- Shift of biomarker surveys to DABS-I raises questions of inter-survey comparability and monitoring continuity.
- Thinner fact sheet (101 vs. 131 indicators) limits use by civil society, state health departments, and international agencies for evidence-based planning.
Scientific / Technological
- Addition of digital literacy indicators is new — positions NFHS as a tool for India's Digital India monitoring architecture.
- DABS-I (ICMR-NIN led) will use clinical/biochemical methods for nutrition biomarkers — potentially more precise than NFHS's household-survey approach for anaemia.
- Stunting (under-5) fell from 35.5% to 29.3%; wasting fell from 7.7% to 5.2%. [S3]
Ethical / Governance
- Removal of sex ratio at birth data weakens tracking of PC-PNDT Act enforcement outcomes and Beti Bachao Beti Padhao impact. [S3]
- Omitting sanitation and clean cooking fuel data severs NFHS's link to Swachh Bharat and PM Ujjwala monitoring. [S3]
- Transparency concern: no official explanation released for which indicators were dropped and why. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- May 29, 2026: MoHFW releases NFHS-6 preliminary fact sheets for 2023–24. [S1]
- June 1, 2026: Business Standard and Down to Earth report controversy over 30 dropped indicators including anaemia, IMR, MMR. [S3]
- June 9, 2026: The Hindu analysis ("What is lost and gained in NFHS-6") highlights regression in exclusive breastfeeding and contraceptive use alongside gains in antenatal care and institutional births. [S2]
- Ongoing (2025–26): DABS-I survey being conducted by ICMR-NIN to fill the anaemia monitoring gap post-NFHS-6. [S3]
- Manipur exclusion due to civil conflict — no timeline announced for inclusion. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- NFHS-6 covers reference year 2023–24; fact sheets released 29 May 2026.
- NFHS is commissioned by Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and conducted by IIPS, Mumbai.
- NFHS-6 fact sheet has 101 indicators vs. 131 in NFHS-5 — a reduction of 30.
- Anaemia data not collected in NFHS-6; shifted to DABS-I under ICMR-NIN.
- Indicators dropped from NFHS-6: anaemia, IMR, MMR, sex ratio at birth, sanitation, clean cooking fuel.
- New indicators added in NFHS-6: digital literacy, direct benefit transfers (DBT).
- Sample size for NFHS-6: approximately 6.8 lakh households.
- Manipur is the only State/UT excluded from NFHS-6.
- Stunting in children under 5 declined from 35.5% (NFHS-5) to 29.3% (NFHS-6).
- Exclusive breastfeeding (infants <6 months) fell by ~8 percentage points in NFHS-6.
- Modern contraceptive use fell from 56.4% to 52.7% in NFHS-6.
- Institutional births rose from 88.6% to 90.6% between NFHS-5 and NFHS-6.
- Only 15.3% of children aged 6–23 months receive an adequate diet (NFHS-6).
- NFHS-1 was conducted in 1992–93; NFHS-4 (2015–16) was first to provide district-level data.
- IIPS stands for International Institute for Population Sciences, located in Mumbai.
8. Mains Relevance
- GS-II: Governance — Health sector; Government schemes; Issues relating to development and management of social sector; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections.
- GS-I: Social issues — Population and associated issues, poverty and developmental issues.
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
- IIPS vs. MoHFW confusion: IIPS conducts the survey; MoHFW commissions it. They are different entities — do not conflate implementing and commissioning bodies.
- NFHS-5 date error: NFHS-5 was 2019–21 (not 2020–21 or 2021–22) — it straddled COVID-19, hence the elongated field period.
- 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."
- Exclusive breastfeeding trend confusion: NFHS-6 shows a decline in exclusive breastfeeding — aspirants often assume all child-health indicators improved.
- District-level data milestone: This was achieved in NFHS-4 (2015–16), not NFHS-5 or NFHS-6 — a common chronology error.
11. Sources
- [S1] Union Health Ministry Releases National Family Health Survey – 6 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2266600®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] The Hindu article: "What is lost and gained in NFHS-6" by Areena Arora, 9 June 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-09/th_international/articleGUTG3C2N4-14883048.ece — (Tier 4, article excerpt provided)
- [S3] Anaemia, IMR, MMR, clean fuel use: NFHS-6 drops key health indicators — https://www.business-standard.com/health/anaemia-imr-mmr-clean-fuel-use-nfhs-6-drops-key-health-indicators-126060101726_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S4] NFHS-6: Vaccination, institutional births improve but nutrition gaps remain — https://www.business-standard.com/health/nfhs-6-child-malnutrition-vaccination-institutional-births-adequate-diet-india-126060101569_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S5] NFHS-6 Reveals India's Child Malnutrition Crisis — https://www.downtoearth.org.in/health/dont-waste-the-future-nfhs-6-shows-why-better-execution-could-matter-more-than-bigger-budgets — (Tier 4)
- [S6] Role of National Family Health Survey (NFHS) — https://www.pib.gov.in/Pressreleaseshare.aspx?PRID=1847431 — (Tier 1)