The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

J&K’s Infant Triumph

Kashmir Observer

|

January 4, 2026 Issue

From weak 1990s health systems to modern care, J&K cut infant deaths, but challenges remain in remote areas.

- Akhter Rugaya

J&K’s Infant Triumph

Over the past thirty years, Jammu and Kashmir has slashed its infant mortality rate by more than 70%, reaching one of its lowest recorded levels in 2023-24, This is a major public health achievement.

But behind these numbers lie persistent regional gaps and new neonatal challenges that demand attention.

Infant mortality, the number of children who die before their first birthday, is one of the clearest measures of a region's health and social development.

The story of J&K's IMR over the last three decades is a story of progress shaped by health reforms, better services, and social change, but also of ongoing challenges that cannot be ignored.

In 1990-91, J&K’s IMR hovered around 70 deaths per 1,000 live births, among the highest in India at the time. Through the early 1990s, the rate stayed stubbornly high, fluctuating between 60 and 70.

Limited health infrastructure, low rates of institutional deliveries, weak immunisation coverage, and difficult terrain, especially in rural and hilly districts, kept infant deaths alarmingly common.

The first signs of improvement came around 1998-99, when IMR dropped from the mid-60s to the high-50s, thanks to early expansions in primary healthcare and immunisation.

Progress, however, was weak.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

J&K’s Infant Triumph

From weak 1990s health systems to modern care, J&K cut infant deaths, but challenges remain in remote areas.

time to read

2 mins

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Electric Blanket Short Circuit Triggers Night Fire

Srinagar: A fire incident at HMT Shah Wilayat Colony, Sector 8 in Srinagar was brought under control during the intervening night of Friday and Saturday, officials from Fire and Emergency Services said, adding that timely intervention prevented a major mishap.

time to read

1 min

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Drug Addiction Triples In Kashmir In 3 Yrs: Div Com

Religious Scholars Roped In To Fight Drug Abuse

time to read

1 mins

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Apple Demand Rises as CA Stores Open

After months of uncertainty and distress sales during the peak harvest season, demand for Kashmiri apples has begun to show a noticeable improvement with the gradual opening of Controlled Atmosphere (CA) storage facilities, raising hopes of better returns among growers across the Valley.

time to read

2 mins

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Indo-Bangla Series in Doubt

Cricket Hit by Political Tensions

time to read

2 mins

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Following BCCI Diktat, KKR Releases Mustafizur Rahman

Bangladesh pacer Mustafizur Rahman has been released by IPL franchise Kolkata Knight Riders after being instructed to do so by the Indian Cricket Board (BCCI) amid heightening diplomatic tensions between the two neighbouring countries.

time to read

1 min

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Rat Burrowing Threatens Dal Lake Bund, Triggers Erosion

Parts of the Dal Lake wall or bund along Boulevard Road in Srinagar are facing serious structural risk due to severe erosion caused by extensive rat burrowing, raising concerns over public safety and infrastructure stability.

time to read

1 min

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Kashmir Observer

Saffron Reality Check

A recent Iranian scientific review has laid bare long-ignored problems in Kashmir's saffron fields at a time when the crop faces climate and market pressure.

time to read

4 mins

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

Too Educated to Work

Years of schooling are supposed to open doors. But in Jammu & Kashmir, higher education is now keeping many women and youth out of jobs, exposing flaws in the recruitment system.

time to read

2 mins

January 4, 2026 Issue

Kashmir Observer

KU Flags Off Cultural Contingent for Youth Fest

University of Kashmir (KU) on Saturday flagged off the varsity's Cultural Contingent for participation in the 39th Inter-University Youth Festival (North Zone), being organised by the Association of Indian Universities (AIU), New Delhi, and hosted by Chitkara University, Chandigarh.

time to read

1 min

January 4, 2026 Issue

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size