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ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY

2012-13
FACT SHEET
ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY
2012-13
FACT SHEET

CHHATTISGARH

Vital Statistics Division


Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India
New Delhi
Website : www.censusindia.gov.in
CHHATTISGARH

Index
Page No.
1. Introduction i-xiv
2. Sample Particulars 1-4
3. Household Characteristics 5
4. Sex Ratio 6-7
5. Effective Literacy Rate 8
6. Marriage 9-10
7. Schooling Status 11
8. Work Status 12
9. Disability 13-14
10. Injury 15-17
11. Acute Illness 18-22
12. Chronic Illness 23-33
13. Fertility 34-39
14. Abortion 40-41
15. Family Planning Practices 42-44
16. Unmet Need for Family Planning 45
17. Ante Natal Care 46-49
18. Delivery Care 50-52
19. Post Natal Care 53-54
20. Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) 55
21. Immunization, Vitamin A & Iron Supplement and Birth Weight 56-59
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22. Childhood Diseases 60-61


23. Breastfeeding and Supplementation 62-65
24. Birth Registration 66
25. Awareness 67-68
26. Mortality 69-76
27. Confidence Interval (95%) for some important Indicators 77-78
28. Annexure 79-106
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Introduction
Decentralized district-based health planning is essential in India because of the
large inter-district variations. In the absence of vital data at the district level, the State
level estimates are being used for formulating district level plans as well as setting the
milestones thereof. In the process, the hotspots (districts requiring special attention) very
often get masked by the State average. This statistical fallacy compounds the problems
of the districts acutely, more so in the health sector. At present, none of the Surveys
provides estimates of core vital indicators on fertility and mortality at district level. The
District Level Household Survey conducted with periodicity of five years mainly focuses
on indicators pertaining to maternal health and child welfare programmes. There has,
therefore, been a surge in demand from various quarters, in recent years, to generate
timely and reliable statistics at the district level for informed decision making in the health
sector.

Genesis
2. The Annual Health Survey (AHS) was conceived during a meeting of the National
Commission of Population held in 2005 under the Chairmanship of the Prime Minister
wherein it was decided that “there should be an Annual Health Survey of all districts which
could be published / monitored and compared against benchmarks”. The objective was to
monitor the performance and outcome of various health interventions of the Government
including those under National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) at closer intervals through
these benchmark indicators. The AHS has been made an integral part of the NRHM,
Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. The responsibility of the project has been entrusted
to the Office of the Registrar General, India on behalf of the Ministry of Health & Family
Welfare in view its expertise in handling the Sample Registration System, one of the largest
demographic surveys in the world.

Objective
3. Realizing the need for preparing a comprehensive district health profile on key
parameters based on a community set up, the AHS has been designed to yield benchmarks
of core vital and health indicators at the district level; prevalence of disabilities, injuries,
acute and chronic illness and access to health care for identified morbidities; and access
to maternal, child health and family planning services. By virtue of being a panel survey,
it has the unique ability to map the rate of change in these indicators on a yearly basis.
AHS would, thus, enable better capturing of the health seeking behaviour of the public as
compared to other periodic cross-sectional surveys, and also help needed corrections in
the strategies.
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Coverage
4. The sample size at the district level has been derived taking Infant Mortality Rate
as the decisive indicator and host of other practical issues related to execution of the
survey. Keeping in view the mammoth size of the sample, it was a conscious decision of
the Government to initially confine the survey to the 284 districts (as per 2001 Census) of
the 8 Empowered Action Group States (Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand,
Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa and Rajasthan) and Assam for a three year period
starting from 2010-11. These 9 high focus States with relatively high fertility and mortality
account for about 48 percent of the total population in the country. A representative
sample of 20,694 statistically selected Primary Sample Units (PSUs - Census Enumeration
Blocks in case of urban areas and villages or a segment thereof in case of larger villages
in rural areas) based on 2001 Census has been drawn from these AHS States which
would cover about 18 million population and 3.6 million households each year. However,
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during the Base line Survey in 2010-11, a total of 20.1 million population and 4.14 million
households and during the first updation survey in 2011-12, 20.61 million population and
4.28 million households have actually been covered. The second updation survey (third
and final round) covered a total of 20.94 million population and 4.32 million households in
2012-13. Despite being restricted to 9 States, the AHS is the largest demographic survey
in the world and covers two and a half times that of the Sample Registration System.

Fieldwork Strategy
5. The project is being implemented as a hybrid model wherein the actual field work
has been outsourced to seven selected Survey Agencies on the pattern of National Family
Health Survey (NFHS) and District Level Household Survey (DLHS). The co-ordination,
supervision and monitoring of the fieldwork in the States are being carried out by dedicated
staff posted at various levels in the respective Directorate of Census Operations (DCOs).
The responsibility for overall co-ordination, supervision and monitoring across the nine
AHS States rests with the AHS Division of ORGI. For smooth and effective execution of
the survey, the AHS States have been divided into 18 mutually exclusive and exhaustive
zones, each having a group of contiguous districts with more or less equal workload.

Technical Consultation
6. The outline of the survey such as approach, periodicity, coverage, sampling strategy,
sample size, permissible levels of relative standard errors, and levels of aggregation, was
finalized after a series of deliberations with the representatives from Ministry of Health
& Family Welfare, National Sample Survey Office (NSSO), Central Statistics Office (CSO),
Ministry of Woman & Child Development, Indian Council of Medical Research, Planning
Commission, International Institute for Population Sciences and other subject experts.
Based on the recommendations, various technical details including preparation of sample
design, derivation of sample size etc. were worked out and vetted by the Technical Advisory
Group (TAG) constituted for the purpose.

Sample Design
7. The Sample design adopted for Annual Health Survey is a uni-stage stratified simple
random sample without replacement except in case of larger villages in rural areas (
population more than or equal to 2000 as per 2001 Census), wherein a two stage stratified
sampling has been applied. The sample units are Census Enumeration Blocks (CEBs) in
urban areas and villages in rural areas. In rural areas, the villages have been divided into
two strata. Stratum I comprises villages with population less than 2000 and Stratum II
contains villages with population 2000 or more. Smaller villages with population less than
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200 were excluded from the sampling frame in such a manner that the total population
of villages so excluded did not exceed 2 per cent of the total population of the district. In
case of Stratum I, the entire village is the sample unit. In case of Stratum II, the village
has been divided into mutually exclusive (non-overlapping) and geographically contiguous
units comprising group of EBs called segments of more or less equal size and population
not exceeding 2000 in any case. One segment from the frame of segments thus prepared
was selected in a random manner to represent the selected village at the second stage of
sampling.

8. The number of sample villages in each district was allocated between the two strata
proportionally to their size (population). The villages within each size stratum were further
ordered by the female literacy rate based on the Census 2001 data, and three disjoint and
equal size substrata were established. The sample villages within each substratum were
selected by simple random sampling without replacement. Similarly, in urban areas, the
Census Enumeration Blocks within a district were ordered by the female literacy rate based
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on the Census 2001 data, and three disjoint and equal size substrata were established.
The sample Census Enumeration Blocks within each substratum were selected by simple
random sampling without replacement. Thus, female literacy which has a direct bearing
on the fertility behaviour was used for implicit stratification. Further, the process of
selection ensured equal representation across three sub-strata both in rural as well as in
urban areas of a district besides rendering the sample design as self-weighting.

Sample Size
9. Generating robust estimates of Infant Mortality Rate at the district level has become
an utmost necessity as reduction in Infant Mortality constitutes one of the key targets in
the Reproductive & Child Health Programme (RCH) under the umbrella of NRHM. This
would also facilitate effective tracking of the Millennium Development Goal 4 on Child
Mortality. The Infant Mortality Rate has therefore been taken as the decisive indicator for
estimation of sample size at the district level. The permissible level of error has been taken
as 10 percentage relative standard error (prse) at the district level. The sample size so
worked out would yield relatively better estimates of Crude Birth Rate / Crude Death Rate
and may also enable generation of rarer indicators like MMR (for a group of districts) with
good precision. In the absence of district level estimates from any other reliable source,
the district level derived estimates of IMR based on SRS pooled data have been used for
estimation of sample size for each district.

Sample Identification Work


10. One of the essential prerequisites for the commencement of the survey was to
uniquely identify the sample units on ground. This was done in all the sample units
across the nine AHS States by the regular staff of ORGI. The work involved firming up of
the boundary of the selected villages / Enumeration Blocks; resorting to segmentation in
case of villages exceeding the population 2000, random selection of segment thereof and
drawing of appropriate notional maps of the sample units to serve as the base map for the
survey work.

Survey Tools
11. The Second updation survey in all the nine AHS States was carried out during
November 2012 to May 2013* and four Schedules, in all, were administered. These are: (i)
House-listing Schedule, (ii) Household Schedule, (iii) Woman Schedule and (iv) Mortality
Schedule. In the House-listing Schedule, the mapping, listing and some key particulars
like type and ownership details collected in the first updation survey in 2011-12 were
updated for the existing houses and households and recorded afresh for the new houses
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and households in the second updation round.

12. During the Second updation survey, all the Usual Residents as on 01.01.2012
were listed In the Household Schedule wherein the information on a few back ground
characteristics viz. Name, Sex, Identification Code, Date of Birth and Date at first Marriage
were copied from the first updation Household Schedule for the Usual Residents of first
updation survey and other characteristics like Relationship to Head, Age, Religion, Social
Group, Marital Status, Education and Occupation/Activity Status were captured afresh
for them . For the new Usual Residents as on 01.01.2012, all the details were captured
afresh. Besides, information in respect of Disability, morbidity (Injuries, Acute Illness, and
Chronic Illness) and access to health insurance is also captured for all the usual residents
as on 01.01.2012.

13. Woman Schedule comprised two sections. Section-I was administered to all Ever
Married Women (EMW) aged 15-49 years and information relating to the outcome of
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* Except for a few districts in Chhattisgarh where the field work is completed in October 2013 due to naxal issues.
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pregnancy(s) (live birth/still birth/abortion); birth history; type of medical attention at


delivery; details of maternal health care(ante-natal/natal/post-natal); immunization of
(*Except for a few districts in Chhattisgarh where the field work is completed in October
2013 due to naxal issues.) children; breast feeding practices including supplements;
occurrence of child diseases (Pneumonia, Diarrhoea and fever); registration of births, etc.
taken place during the reference period (i.e. 01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011) was collected.
Section II focused on information on pregnancy; use, sources and practices of family
planning methods; details relating to future use of contraceptives and unmet need;
awareness about RTI/STI, HIV/AIDS, administration of HAF/ORT/ORS during diarrhoea
and danger signs of ARI/Pneumonia; and these details were collected from all Currently
Married Women aged 15-49 years. Information relating the Ever Married Women (EMW)
like conception details, usage of NPT kit, registration of pregnancy, health problems and
subsequent treatments during ante-natal/natal/post-natal period, cost incurred by the
woman during delivery etc. is also collected during the second updation survey.

14. Through the Mortality Schedule, details relating to death occurred to usual
residents of sample household during the reference period (01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011)
were captured and it included information on name & sex of deceased, date of death, age
at death, registration of death and source of medical attention received before death. For
infant deaths, a question on symptoms preceding death was also probed. In case of deaths
associated with pregnancy, information on a variety of questions on factors leading/
contributing to death, symptoms preceding death, time between onset of complications
and death, etc. were asked to yield data on various determinants of maternal mortality.

Supervision and Third Party Audit


15. In addition to the multilayer supervision mechanism adopted by the Survey Agencies,
regular inspections were carried out by the officers/officials of respective DCOs and those
from ORGI headquarters to ensure the data quality. The inspections were a judicious mix
of concurrent as well as post survey audit. Over and above, a component of Third Party
Audit was included to verify and authenticate the surveyed data through an independent
mechanism. The Third Party Audit work was carried out in 20 randomly selected AHS
units in each of the districts covering every household thereof by following a standard
protocol prescribed by ORGI. Truncated versions of Household, Women and Mortality
Schedules were filled in afresh by the field staff of the Third Party Audit Agencies. The
findings in respect of key indicators were matched and re-survey was undertaken by the
Survey Agencies in units where the variation was outside the permissible limit. The third
party audit also helped in netting of missed vital events, particularly rarer ones like infant
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and maternal deaths.

Dissemination of Results
16. In view of the large volume of data collected under AHS and significant time required
for validation and processing, dissemination of AHS results is done in two phases. The
first set of data is released in the form of State-wise bulletins and second in the form of
factsheets. The bulletins of the second updation survey was released in March 2014,
which contained the district level data on crude birth rate, crude death rate, natural
growth rate, infant mortality rate, neo-natal and post neo-natal mortality rates, under 5
mortality rate, sex ratio at birth, sex ratio (0-4 years) and overall sex ratio . In addition, the
Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR), Maternal Mortality Rate and life time risk were released
for a group of districts. In order to facilitate direct intervention, the maternal mortality
indicators were combined and released for a group of districts on the basis of existing
administrative divisions in the respective AHS States.
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17. Under the present phase of dissemination, data of on host of other important
parameters covered in AHS under Household and Woman Schedules are being released in
the form of State and District Level Factsheets of the second updation survey. Though the
sample size has been calculated for the district as a whole, the rural and urban estimates
at the district level have also been published as byproduct. Users are advised to keep the
above fact into consideration while using the rural / urban estimates of a district. In order
to ward off unusual sampling fluctuations, the urban estimates have not been published
in respect of some indicators for the districts where the number of urban sample units
was less than six. To begin with, number of PSUs, Households, Population, Ever Married
Women, Currently Married Women, Children aged 12-23 months (as on date of survey)
covered in the sample of each district and the State along with their rural-urban breakup
have been given to provide the users requisite insight on the metadata. The indicators
contained in the AHS Bulletin have also been reproduced in these Factsheets so that the
users may have access to complete set of indicators at one place. However, they may refer
to the AHS Bulletin for details on metadata.

Marriage
18. The information on marital status as on 01.01.2012 was probed in respect of
all household members (Usual Residents) irrespective of their age. For those who were
married, the date of first marriage was recorded. Using this, age at first marriage, which
has a direct impact on child bearing as women marrying early have on an average a longer
period of exposure to pregnancy and a greater number of lifetime births, was obtained.
Using the age data, the mean age at marriage for males and females has been worked
out and included in the Factsheet. The mean age at marriage is based on the marriages
to the members of the household (Usual Residents as on 1.1.2012) taken place during
2009-11. The proportion of marriages among males and females taking place below the
legal age, i.e., 21 and 18 years respectively, has also been tabulated. Such proportions
are also based on the marriages to the members of the household (Usual Residents as
on 1.1.2012) taken place during 2009-11. Besides, the percentage of Currently Married
Women aged 20-24 years marrying before legal age (18 years) and percentage of Currently
Married Men aged 25-29 years marrying before legal age (21 years) have been worked out
and presented.

Disability and Injury


19. The data on any type of disability as on date of survey was collected in respect of all
the usual residents. The type of disability included `mental’, `visual’, `hearing’, `speech’,
`loco-motor’, `multiple’ and ‘others’ . The prevalence of any type of disability per 1, 00,000
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population by gender and residence at the district and State levels has been presented
in the factsheet. Since it is difficult to capture the type of injury and its severity from lay
reporting, an attempt has been made to assess the severity of injury from the type and
duration of hospitalization required. This would also provide an assessment of the workload
on hospitals / doctors on account of injury. Accordingly, the type of treatment meted to
the injury during last one year of the date of survey has been collected. The categories
by type of treatment included `treated in intensive care unit for any time-1, treated as
in-patient with stay more than two weeks-2, treated as in-patient with stay one to two
weeks-3, treated as in-patient with stay less than one week-4, treated as out-patient-5,
treated by traditional healers-6, and treated at home-7’. Based on these categories, the
number of persons injured by type of treatment received per 1, 00,000 population, have
been categorized into severe (by including categories 1 & 2), major (by including categories
3 & 4) and minor (by including categories 5 & 6) groups. Those treated at home have been
excluded from the above categorization and thus from the analysis also.
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Acute Illness
20. On the morbidity front, if any member (usual resident) of the household suffered from
any ‘acute illness’ during last fifteen days prior to the date of survey, the type of illness has
been ascertained. Based on this data, persons suffering from acute illness per 1,00,000
population has been presented for a few select diseases like diarrhoea / dysentery; acute
respiratory infection & all types of fever and also for any type of acute illness. Besides, the
source from where the treatment for the acute illness was taken has also been included.
Accordingly, two important indicators, viz., percentage of persons suffering from acute
illness and taking treatment from any source and percentage of persons suffering from
acute illness and taking treatment from Government source have been presented. The
latter gives the share of Government source across all types of sources availed for taking
treatment. It may be noted that the entire fieldwork was carried out over a period of six
to seven months and in the process, districts were covered at different points of time (i.e.,
months / seasons). The seasonality effect may be taken note of while interpreting the
results.

Chronic Illness
21. The data in respect of chronic illness has been collected based on the symptoms
pertaining to a particular illness persisting for more than one month and also in respect
of illnesses where it was diagnosed. For both the cases, the reference period was last one
year preceding the date of survey. For ascertaining information on symptoms, a list of
symptoms associated with various types of diseases was provided along with a separate
category for asymptomatic (i.e., having no symptoms). The asymptomatic included those
who were not suffering from any illness as well as those who were suffering but had
no symptoms. Using this data, percentage of persons having any kind of symptoms
of chronic illness along with their source of treatment has been presented. As regards
chronic illnesses diagnosed, this was included to measure the extent to which facilities
for diagnosis and treatment of some major chronic illnesses set up by centre/State/local
Government / private agencies have been utilized. A list of common chronic diseases and
those pertaining to major health intervention programmes was provided. Based on this
data, percentage of persons diagnosed for a few important diseases such as diabetes,
hypertension, tuberculosis, asthma / chronic respiratory disease and arthritis per 1,
00,000 population has been presented besides those diagnosed for any type of chronic
illness. Using the data collected on source of diagnosis, status with regard to getting
regular treatment and source of treatment, percentage of persons having diagnosed for
any kind of chronic illness and getting regular treatment as well as those getting regular
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treatment from Government source has been worked out and included in the Factsheet.
Since the data on morbidity has been elicited as reported by the respondents, it may suffer
on account of accuracy. Nevertheless, the availability of such a rich data set at the district
level would fill in the much awaited void and pave the way for evidence-based health
planning and appropriate interventions.

Fertility
22. The Total Fertility Rate (TFR), which is an age-period fertility rate for a synthetic
cohort of women, measures the average number of births a group of women would have
by the time they reach 50 years of age if they were to give birth at the current age-specific
fertility rates. The TFR is expressed as the average number of births per woman. Under
AHS, TFR has been calculated by dividing three years average of all births reported during
2009-11 by all the women in respective age group. The seven five-yearly age-specific
fertility rates for all women in the age groups from 15-19 to 45-49 have been added and

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thereafter multiplied by 5 to yield the TFR. Due to lack of adequate number of births, the
TFR by residence could not be worked out and hence is not being published.

23. The distribution of births by birth order is another way to understand the dynamics
on spacing of children and level of fertility. In this regard, two key indicators namely,
`percentage of women aged 20-24 reporting birth of order 2 & above’ and `percentage of
women reporting birth of order 3 & above’ based on last two live births taken place to
Ever Married Women aged 15-49 years during 2009-11, have been presented. ‘Percentage
of Currently Married Women aged 15-49 years with two living children wanting no more
children’ is one of the most crucial indicators on desire to limit child bearing. While
deriving this indicator, sterilized women or their husbands have not been taken into
account whereas women who were currently pregnant have been included.

24. Teen-age pregnancy and motherhood is an important subject in the settings where
the marriage of girls takes place at very young ages. This is not only important from
the fertility perspective but also its consequent implication on the health of the mother
and child. Accordingly, `percentage of women aged 15-19 who were already mothers or
pregnant at the time of survey’ has been tabulated and it depicts the percentage of women
who have begun child bearing among all ever married women aged 15-19 years. The ever
married sample denominator for the age group 15-19 years has not been adjusted by the
all women factors for the same age group. This factor should be taken into consideration
while interpreting the results.

Median age at first live birth


25. Median age at first live birth of women aged 15-49 years has been presented to
reflect the age at which 50 percent of the women have given their first live birth. This
indicator covers women of all marital status and ever married sample denominator has
been adjusted by the all women factors in this age group. Ever Married Women not yet
having first live birth and Never Married Women have been included as a separate category
for computation. Median has been calculated from cumulated single year of age percent
distributions of age at first birth. Median is linearly interpolated by the age values by
which 50 percent or more of the women had a first birth. In order to gauge the same for
older women of the same cohort, median age at first live birth for women aged 25-49 years
has also been calculated and presented. These two indicators in conjunction would help
in comparing the age with regard to entry into parenthood between the two cohorts.

Birth interval
26. The information on birth interval, which is defined as the length of time between
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two successive live births, has been collected in respect of last two live births which took
place during 2009-11 for birth order 2 & above. Short birth intervals are likely to have
adverse bearing on the mother’s health as also on the chances of survival of the neonates
and infants. In the Indian context, the birth interval of 36 months may be taken as the
bare minimum from the perspective of reducing neonatal and infant mortality and also for
achieving the requisite nutritional outcomes. The information on percentage of live births
taking place after an interval of 36 months has been calculated and presented to provide
insight into the pace of child bearing.

Mean number of children ever born and surviving


27. The number of children ever born and surviving has been collected for all Ever
Married Women aged 15-49 years. The survival status has been assessed as on 1.1.2012
(the reference point for the population). The number of children ever born to women
provides an estimate of cohort fertility against the period measures of fertility such as the

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CBR and the TFR. In order to facilitate comparison of completed cohort fertility with the
current fertility, the mean number of ever born children to women aged 45-49 years has
been calculated and presented. The gap between the two would demonstrate the decline
in fertility levels in the recent past.

Abortion
28. Abortion as an option was probed for all the pregnancies which resulted into any
kind of outcome i.e. live birth, still birth, spontaneous and induced abortion during 2009-
2011. This was followed by a series of questions such as when the abortion had taken
place (month & year), month of pregnancy when the abortion had occurred, whether
any ANC was received, whether ultrasound was performed before the abortion, the place
of abortion and who performed the abortion. Based on these data, various indicators
such as percentage of pregnancy(s) to women aged 15-49 years resulting in abortion,
percentage of women who received any ANC before abortion, percentage of women who
went for ultrasound before abortion, average month of pregnancy at the time of abortion,
percentage of abortions performed by skilled health personnel (doctor / nurse / ANM /
LHV / trained dai), and abortions which took place in institutions have been tabulated
and presented.

Family Planning Practices


29. The information on awareness as well as the usage in respect of Family Planning
Practices was probed from Currently Married Women aged 15-49 years. There were a few
women whose marital status as on 1.1.2012 (reference date) was Currently Married but
on date of survey, their marital status was widow / divorcee / separated. In such cases,
questions on only awareness were probed from them.

Current usage of Family Planning Methods


30. Currently Married Women aged 15-49 years, who were currently menstruating or
who were in lactating status or secondary amenorrhoea as on date of survey, were asked
whether they or their husbands are currently using any method(s) of family planning. In
other words, those CMW who were currently pregnant or in menopause status or who have
undergone hysterectomy or never menstruated were excluded from the sample. The family
planning methods included both modern as well as traditional methods. Modern methods
included Tubectomy, Vasectomy, Copper-T/IUD, Pills (Daily), Pills (Weekly), Emergency
Contraceptive Pill, Condom/Nirodh, etc., while the traditional ones were Contraceptive
Herbs, Rhythm/Periodic abstinence, Withdrawal, Lactational Amenorrhoea Method,
etc. Accordingly, percentage of CMW reporting use of various types of family planning
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methods (most used method) has been tabulated. In addition, percentage of CMW using
any method (Contraceptive Prevalence Rate), any modern method and any traditional
method has also been tabulated. Levels of use of contraceptives provide the most obvious
and widely accepted criterion for assessing the success of FP programme.

Unmet Need for Family Planning


31. The unmet need for Family Planning is a crucial indicator for assessing the future
demand for Family Planning services / supplies. Currently Married Women who are not
using any method of contraception but who do not want any more children are defined as
having an unmet need for limiting and those who are not using contraception but want
to wait for two years or more before having another child are defined as having an unmet
need for spacing. The sum total of unmet need for limiting and spacing is the unmet need
for Family Planning. In order to ensure comparability with DHS Estimates, similar set of
questions were probed from CMW aged 15-49 years under AHS also.

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32. For working out the estimates on unmet need, the unmet need for spacing has been
calculated as the “proportion of pregnant CMW whose pregnancy was mistimed; CMW in
lactational amenorrhoea who are not using any family planning method and whose last
birth was mistimed, or whose last birth was unwanted but now they say they want more
children; fecund CMW who are neither currently pregnant nor in amenorrhoea, and who
are not using any family planning method and say that they want to wait for two or more
years for the next birth, including those who say that they are unsure whether they want
another child, or want another child but are unsure when to have the birth”.

33. The unmet need for limiting has been worked out as the “proportion of pregnant
CMW whose pregnancy was unwanted; CMW in lactational amenorrhoea who are not
using any family planning method, whose last child was unwanted and who do not want
any more children; and fecund CMW who are neither pregnant nor in amenorrhoea who
are not using any method of family planning and who want no more children”. Using
the met demand for contraception (current contraceptive users) and the unmet need for
contraception, the total demand for family planning as well as the percentage demand
satisfied can be assessed. The classification for the need for family planning is illustrated
as under:

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Ante-natal Care
34. Ante-natal care constitutes one of the key elements towards initiatives to promote
safe motherhood. A series of questions to capture various aspects of ante-natal care such
as, number of ante-natal check-ups received, months of pregnancy at the time of first
ANC, main source of ANC, type of tests performed during ANC, number of Tetanus Toxoid
(TT) injections received and number of days of consumption of Iron & Folic Acid (IFA)
tablets/syrup, were asked from the EMW aged 15-49 years in respect of their last two
outcomes of pregnancies which have resulted into live births / still births during 2009-
11. However, appropriate indicators based on the above aspects have been tabulated in
respect of responses recorded for last live / still births.

35. The indicators included in the Factsheets are percentage of mothers who received
any ANC, percentage of mothers who had ANC in first trimester, percentage of mothers
who received 3 or more ANC, percentage of mothers who received at least one TT injection,
percentage of mothers who consumed IFA for 100 days or more and percentage of mothers
who had full ante-natal check-up. The full ante-natal check-up comprises at least three
visits for ANC, at least one TT injection received and IFA consumption for 100 days or
more. In addition, percentage of mothers who received ANC from Government source,
percentage of mothers whose blood pressure & blood (for Hb) were taken and percentage
of mothers who underwent ultrasound have been calculated and presented. Besides,
percentage of Currently Married Pregnant Women aged 15-49 years registered for ANC
has also been presented.

Delivery Care
36. Under Delivery Care, the details about place of delivery, source of transport provided/
availed for reaching the institution, length of stay in the institution after delivery, type of
delivery (normal / caesarean / assisted) and the personnel conducting delivery in case
of domiciliary births were inquired from the EMW aged 15-49 years for their last two
pregnancy outcomes resulting into live births/still births during 2009-11. As in the case
of ante-natal care, indicators based on these parameters have been tabulated in respect
of responses for last live/still births. Percentage of deliveries taken place in institutions
and their distribution into Government and Private institutions; percentage of deliveries
taken place at home; percentage of home deliveries conducted by skilled health personnel;
and percentage of Safe deliveries are the key indicators presented in the Factsheet. Safe
delivery comprises institutional deliveries and home deliveries conducted by doctor/ nurse
/ ANM / LHV and it does not include those attended by trained dai. However, trained dai
is included under skilled health personnel. If the respondent has mentioned more than
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

one person attending delivery, only the most qualified person is taken into consideration.

37. As regards the extent of stay in institutions after delivery which is very crucial
and has a direct bearing on the new born care as also on the health of the mother, the
percentage of less than 24 hours stay in the institution after delivery has been worked out
and presented. Besides, percentage of Caesarean deliveries out of total deliveries taken
place in Government and Private Institutions respectively has also been presented.

Post-natal Care
38. Getting a Post partum / Post-natal check-up soon after the birth of baby or within
48 hours is crucial for the health of both the mother and the child. Accordingly, three
indicators, viz., percentage of mothers who received Post-natal check-up within 48 hours
of delivery, percentage of mothers who received Post-natal check-up within one week of
delivery and percentage of mothers who did not receive any Post-natal check-up have been
calculated and presented. In case of institutional delivery where the woman had stayed
x
CHHATTISGARH

there for at least 48 hours, it was presumed that the post-natal care was given within 48
hours. These indicators are based on the last outcome of pregnancy which resulted into
live / still birth during 2009-11.

39. Along with the first post-natal check-up of mother, check-up of the new borns is
essential. It was therefore probed from the mothers, whose last outcome of pregnancy
resulted into live birth during 2009-12, when was the new born checked up. Based on
this, the percentage of new born who received check up within 24 hours of birth has been
worked out and presented. In case of institutional delivery if the baby remained there for
at least 24 hours, it was presumed that the first check-up was done within 24 hours.

Financial assistance under Janani Suraksha Yojana


40. The Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY) is one of the most important programmes under
the overall umbrella of NRHM aimed at reducing Maternal Mortality Ratio and Neo-natal
Mortality Rate by promoting institutional deliveries. Under the Scheme, cash incentives
are provided to mothers and they are facilitated by Accredited Social Health Activists
(ASHAs) to deliver their babies in a health facility. There are also provisions for cost
reimbursement for transport and incentives to ASHAs for encouraging mothers to opt
for institutional delivery. The scheme is fully sponsored by the Central Government and
is implemented in all States and Union Territories, with special focus on low-performing
States. There is also a provision for roping in the private sector by giving accreditation to
willing private hospitals/nursing homes for providing delivery services. The Scheme has
been implemented in all the 9 AHS States since 2005.

41. In order to gauge the spread and effectiveness of the JSY, Ever Married Women
aged 15-49 years were probed whether they had availed the maternity financial assistance
for safe motherhood under the scheme in respect of their last two outcomes of delivery
resulting in live / still births during 2009-11. The percentage of mothers who availed
financial assistance for delivery, percentage of mothers who availed financial assistance
for institutional delivery and percentage of mothers who availed financial assistance for
Government institutional delivery under JSY, all in respect of the last outcome of delivery
resulting in live birth / still birth, have been calculated and presented. Since the scope
of JSY has been extended to domiciliary births also, these three sets of indicators would
present a holistic picture.

Immunization
42. The information on childhood immunization, i.e., vaccination coverage, has been
collected for all living children [last two outcomes of pregnancy(s) resulting in live births
during 2009-11]. Information on six vaccine preventable diseases namely, tuberculosis,
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

diphtheria, whooping cough (Pertussis), tetanus, polio and measles, has been collected
with reference to the status as on date of survey. Universal immunization of children
against these six diseases is vital for reducing infant and child mortality. Whenever the
mother had the vaccination card (Immunization / MCH) and if the card was available at
the time of interview, the responses were recorded based on entries in the card. Otherwise,
the responses as reported by the mother were noted down. For those living children who
did not receive any vaccination, the main reason thereof has also been noted.

43. In conformity with the International and Govt. of India guidelines which specify that
children should be fully vaccinated by the time they complete their first year of life, the
12-23 months age group has been chosen for analysis. The percentage of children having
Immunization Card, percentage of children aged 12-23 months who have received BCG,
percentage of children who have received 3 doses of polio vaccine, percentage of children

xi
CHHATTISGARH

who have received polio dose at birth, percentage of children who have received three doses
of DPT vaccine and percentage of children who have received measles vaccine, all for the
age group 12-23 months, have been calculated and presented. Besides the percentage of
children aged 12-23 months who have been fully immunized, the percentage of children
aged 12-23 months who did not receive any vaccination have also been tabulated in
order to portray the complete picture of immunization. According to the WHO guidelines,
children are considered fully immunized when they have received vaccination against
tuberculosis, three doses of DPT, three doses of the poliomyelitis and one dose of measles.

Administration of Vitamin-A and Iron & Folic Acid supplements


44. Proper and sufficient intake of Vitamin-A and Iron supplements is essential to
thwart childhood morbidity and mortality. Vitamin-A is an essential micro nutrient for the
immune system and plays an important role in maintaining the epithelial tissues in the
body. Severe Vitamin-A deficiency (VAD) can cause eye damage. VAD has also the potential
to increase the severity of measles and diarrhoeal diseases in children and slow recovery
from illness. Since the human liver can store an adequate amount of the vitamin for 4-6
months, Vitamin-A dosing every six months is one of the usual methods for ensuring that
children at risk are protected from developing VAD. The National Programme on Prevention
of Blindness mandates that children of age 9 months to 5 years should be administered
oral doses of Vitamin-A every six months. In order to assess the situation, information on
children aged 6-35 months who have received at least one dose of Vitamin-A during the
last six months has been collected and presented.

45. Anaemia, which is characterised by a low level of haemoglobin in the blood, is a


great concern in young children because it can result in impaired cognitive performance,
behavioural and motor coordination, language development and scholastic achievement.
It also enhances the risk of morbidity from other infectious diseases. One of the most
vulnerable groups to anaemia is children aged 6-23 months. It was probed from the mothers
of all living children older than 6 months whether IFA tablet / syrup was administered to
the children [last two outcomes of pregnancy(s) resulting in live births during 2009-11] in
the last 3 months. IFA tablet/syrup as supplements is given to child beyond six months
to prevent anaemia. Based on this, the percentage of children aged 6-35 months who have
received IFA tablets / syrup during last three months has been calculated and presented.

Birth weight
46. Birth weight is an important indicator to measure the vulnerability of a new born
to the risk of childhood illness and chances of survival. The information on birth weight
assists in monitoring programmes to reduce neo-natal and infant mortality through a
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

reduction in low birth weight infants. The information on birth weight has been collected
in respect of all living children [last two outcomes of pregnancy(s) resulting in live births
during 2009-11]. Based on this data, the percentage of children whose birth weight was
taken and percentage of children whose birth weight was less than 2.5 Kg. have been
worked out and presented.

Childhood diseases
47. Treatment practices and contact with health services among children with the 3
most important childhood illnesses namely, Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI), Fever and
Diarrhoea, help in the assessment of National Programmes aimed at reducing the mortality
impact of these illnesses. The information on children suffering from Acute Respiratory
Infection, Fever and Diarrhoea in respect of all the living children [last two outcomes of
pregnancy(s) resulting in live births during 2009-11] during fifteen days preceding the date
of survey has been collected. This has been done to minimise the recall lapse. Besides the
xii
CHHATTISGARH

prevalence, the information on treatment of ARI with antibiotics, treatment of fever and
the treatment of diarrhoea with Home Available Fluids (HAF) / fluids prepared from ORS
packet has been collected. The treatment of diarrhoeal diseases with Oral Rehydration
Therapy (ORT) aids in the assessment of programmes that recommends such treatment.
Based on these data, the percentage of children suffering from Diarrhoea and received
HAF / ORS / ORT, percentage of children suffering from ARI and sought treatment, and
percentage of children suffering from fever and sought treatment have been calculated
and presented.

Child feeding practices


48. Early breastfeeding practices determine the successful establishment and duration
of breastfeeding. It is recommended that children be put to the breast immediately
or within one hour of birth. There is growing evidence of the benefits to mother and
child of early initiation of breastfeeding preferably in the first hour of the birth. Early
initiation of breastfeeding contributes to reducing neo-natal mortality. It ensures early
skin to skin contact which is important in preventing hypothermia and establishing the
bond between the mother and her child. Early initiation of breastfeeding also reduces
the mother’s risk of post partum haemorrhage, one of the leading causes of maternal
mortality. Although breastfeeding is nearly universal in India, very few children are put
to breastfeed immediately after birth. In order to have an assessment with regard to the
time of initiation of breastfeeding, the mothers of all living children [last two outcomes
of pregnancy(s) resulting in live births during 2009-11] were asked when did they first
breastfeed their baby. Based on this, the percentage of children breastfed within one hour
of birth has been calculated and presented.

49. Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of the child’s life is an essential
component of the optimal infant and young child feeding practices. The Government of India
recommends that children should be exclusively breastfed for the first six months of life
(i.e., the child should be given only breast milk and nothing else, not even water). In order
to assess the situation on ground, the mothers of all living children [last two outcomes of
pregnancy(s) resulting in live births during 2009-11] were asked how many days/months
did they exclusively breastfeed their baby. Based on the responses, percentage of children
aged 6-35 months exclusively breastfed for at least six months has been worked out and
presented.

Complementary feeding
50. The introduction of complementary feeding at six months of age, solid and semi-
solid food and the diverse food combinations fed to children also constitute part of the
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

optimal feeding practices. The purpose of complementary feeding is to complement the


breast milk and sustain the growth and development of the child. WHO recommends
introduction of solid or semi-solid foods to infants around the age of 6 months because by
that age, breast milk by itself is no longer sufficient to maintain the child’s optimal growth.
Information on supplementation was obtained by asking mothers of all living children
[last two outcomes of pregnancy(s) resulting in live births during 2009-11] at what age did
they start feeding the baby food other than breast milk. The type of food included water,
animal milk / formula milk, semi-solid mashed food, solid (adult) food and vegetables/
fruits. Based on these, the percentage of children who received foods other than breast
milk such as water, animal/formula milk, semi-solid mashed food, solid (adult) food and
vegetables/fruits during first six months has been worked out and presented. Besides,
the average month by which children received these foods have also been worked out and
presented.

xiii
CHHATTISGARH

Birth Registration
51. India, being a signatory to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, 1989
which recognizes birth registration as one of the first rights of child, is committed to
achieve universalization of birth registration. In India, registration of birth is compulsory
under the Registration of Births and Deaths (RBD) Act, 1969. The Act mandates that
every birth should be registered and a birth certificate provided free of charge to the
informant. Despite significant efforts to improve the Civil Registration System, especially
during the past decade, the overall level of registration of births still falls short by about
25 percent. The registration system in the country functions at different levels of efficiency
across States/UTs. In order to assess the functioning of the Civil Registration System
in the community, information on whether the birth of the baby was registered with the
civil authority and if so, the birth certificate was received or not in respect of all living
children [last two outcomes of pregnancy(s) resulting in live births during 2009-11] has
been collected. Based on this, the percentage of children whose births were registered
and the percentage of children whose births were registered & who also received the Birth
Certificates have been arrived at and presented.

52. Under the RBD Act, the institutions where birth takes place is to register the birth
and issue the birth certificate in case they have been declared as the registration units
or to report the event to the local Registrar of Births & Deaths. Of late, majority of the
Government institutions have been declared as registration units. Since a review of the
system across different States/UTs has revealed that due to lack of a proper and complete
reporting system, the institutional births which have already been registered are not being
reflected in the final figures compiled and therefore in order to net all such cases, it was
presumed that the birth would have been registered. However, even in these cases it was
probed whether the birth certificate has been received.

53. This Factsheet of the second updation survey pertains to the State of Chhattisgarh.
The field work for the AHS has been carried out by M/s Developement & Research Service
Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi in the alloted zones. The third party audit work in the State has been
done by M/s. Research & Development Initiative Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.

54. The survey reference period of this Factsheet is 01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011 and the
results presented as based on the data for the period 2009, 2010 and 2011.


Annual Health Survey 2012-13

xiv
CHHATTISGARH

SAMPLE PARTICULARS
Sample Units Households Population
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 1255 926 329 287085 226554 60531 1264309 994416 269893
Bastar 70 59 11 15806 14306 1500 71531 64521 7010
Bilaspur 90 60 30 25088 16995 8093 106626 69602 37024
Dantewada 81 72 9 15125 12951 2174 68561 59583 8978
Dhamtari 97 78 19 23223 20373 2850 106459 94023 12436
Durg 119 61 58 25646 15496 10150 120957 74687 46270
Janjgir-Champa 77 64 13 22495 20254 2241 96586 87836 8750
Jashpur 54 50 4 12120 11508 612 56239 53556 2683
Kanker 61 56 5 11799 11049 750 51645 48397 3248
Kawardha 31 27 4 6639 5359 1280 28592 23342 5250
Korba 117 62 55 28153 16965 11188 117747 68935 48812
Koriya 61 37 24 11402 8093 3309 48871 33664 15207
Mahasamund 62 52 10 13895 12304 1591 56921 50427 6494
Raigarh 91 73 18 19317 16505 2812 77735 64938 12797
Raipur 115 69 46 27085 19007 8078 124335 86636 37699
Rajnandgaon 63 47 16 12470 9853 2617 58000 46595 11405
Surguja 66 59 7 16822 15536 1286 73504 67674 5830

Ever Married Women Currently Married Women


Children 12-23 months
State / District (aged 15-49 years) (aged 15-49 years)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 251943 197335 54608 233563 183215 50348 34864 28513 6351
Bastar 13396 12049 1347 12331 11088 1243 2113 1930 183
Bilaspur 21042 13790 7252 19553 12853 6700 2676 1968 708
Dantewada 13204 11258 1946 12027 10277 1750 1951 1644 307
Dhamtari 21814 19315 2499 20156 17922 2234 3105 2766 339
Durg 24660 15106 9554 23077 14157 8920 3231 2075 1156
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 18061 16406 1655 16952 15426 1526 2370 2209 161
Jashpur 10863 10312 551 10082 9575 507 1526 1475 51
Kanker 10568 9910 658 9511 8934 577 1291 1215 76
Kawardha 5780 4724 1056 5416 4432 984 716 576 140
Korba 24064 13887 10177 22278 12790 9488 3665 2406 1259
Koriya 10148 7167 2981 9432 6697 2735 1416 1084 332
Mahasamund 11557 10248 1309 10701 9533 1168 1398 1253 145
Raigarh 15535 13005 2530 14406 12093 2313 2583 2203 380
Raipur 24665 17053 7612 22933 15916 7017 2309 1607 702
Rajnandgaon 11824 9550 2274 10902 8831 2071 1477 1229 248
Surguja 14762 13555 1207 13806 12691 1115 3037 2873 164

1
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Sample Units

Urban
26%

Rural
74%

Chhattisgarh: District wise Sample Units


90

80

70

60

50

40
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

30

20

10

Rural Urban

2
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Sample Households

Urban
21%

Rural
79%

Chhattisgarh: District wise Sample Households


25000

20000

15000

10000
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

5000

Rural Urban

3
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Sample Population

Urban
21%

Rural
79%

Chhattisgarh: District wise Sample Population


100000
90000
80000
70000
60000
50000
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

40000
30000
20000
10000
0

Rural Urban

4
CHHATTISGARH

HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS
Average Household Size
State / District SC ST ALL
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 4.3 4.2 4.5 4.4 4.4 4.3 4.4 4.4 4.5
Bastar 4.1 4.1 4.4 4.5 4.5 4.6 4.5 4.5 4.7
Bilaspur 4.3 4.2 4.7 3.9 3.8 4.5 4.2 4.1 4.6
Dantewada 4.5 4.6 4.1 4.5 4.6 4.1 4.5 4.6 4.1
Dhamtari 4.2 4.3 4.1 4.3 4.3 3.9 4.6 4.6 4.4
Durg 4.5 4.5 4.5 4.7 4.8 4.4 4.7 4.8 4.6
Janjgir-Champa 4.3 4.3 3.5 4.3 4.3 4.1 4.3 4.3 3.9
Jashpur 4.2 4.2 4.6 4.7 4.7 4.0 4.7 4.7 4.4
Kanker 4.2 4.2 3.5 4.4 4.4 3.9 4.4 4.4 4.3
Kawardha 4.1 4.1 4.2 4.2 4.2 3.9 4.3 4.4 4.1
Korba 4.1 4.0 4.3 4.0 4.0 4.2 4.2 4.0 4.4
Koriya 4.5 4.3 4.8 4.1 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.1 4.6
Mahasamund 3.9 3.9 4.0 4.1 4.1 4.0 4.1 4.1 4.1
Raigarh 3.8 3.7 4.4 4.1 4.1 4.2 4.0 3.9 4.6
Raipur 4.3 4.3 4.5 4.4 4.3 4.5 4.6 4.5 4.7
Rajnandgaon 4.5 4.5 4.2 4.8 4.9 4.1 4.7 4.8 4.4
Surguja 4.3 4.2 5.1 4.4 4.4 4.2 4.4 4.3 4.5

Population below age 15 Currently Married Illiterate


Dependency Ratio
State / District years (%) Women aged 15-49 years (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 30.4 31.4 26.6 61.0 63.9 50.8 36.5 41.9 16.5
Bastar 30.3 30.7 26.0 57.5 58.5 47.6 55.7 59.1 20.8
Bilaspur 30.8 32.9 26.5 61.5 66.4 52.4 34.9 44.1 15.9
Dantewada 33.2 34.0 26.7 58.3 60.3 44.9 72.0 79.0 23.0
Dhamtari 28.9 29.2 26.6 58.4 59.1 53.5 21.9 22.6 16.3
Durg 28.0 29.3 25.6 57.2 61.6 49.7 21.5 25.5 14.4
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 30.4 30.8 26.4 65.1 66.5 53.9 38.2 40.4 19.4
Jashpur 31.0 31.1 26.6 64.0 64.8 47.4 45.1 46.3 12.8
Kanker 26.6 26.7 24.8 50.7 51.1 43.0 25.1 25.9 5.9
Kawardha 34.5 35.4 29.0 70.5 73.3 54.9 46.9 51.6 16.0
Korba 29.9 31.5 27.5 56.3 62.0 48.4 34.7 47.0 16.9
Koriya 29.3 31.4 24.1 55.8 61.5 43.3 36.4 43.7 16.2
Mahasamund 29.4 29.7 27.2 61.5 62.5 53.2 36.4 37.9 22.5
Raigarh 28.5 28.9 26.5 61.4 63.3 50.8 36.8 38.7 23.6
Raipur 31.3 32.5 28.3 62.5 66.2 54.3 35.6 42.4 18.9
Rajnandgaon 29.9 30.9 24.5 60.0 62.2 49.8 24.9 28.1 8.6
Surguja 33.7 34.3 26.1 69.6 71.9 47.0 51.0 54.0 14.7

5
CHHATTISGARH

SEX RATIO
Sex Ratio at Birth Sex Ratio (0- 4 Years) Sex Ratio (All Ages)
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Chhattisgarh 956 958 945 965 970 944 974 978 956

Bastar 930 943 792 933 956 703 987 989 959

Bilaspur 924 935 898 946 958 913 948 950 945

Dantewada 918 937 787 932 940 866 1005 1009 977

Dhamtari 995 991 1033 991 991 993 995 992 1022

Durg 996 1003 980 986 994 969 989 1002 964

Janjgir-Champa 893 883 1000 920 916 956 967 967 965

Jashpur 981 984 871 969 971 905 970 973 880

Kanker 904 907 809 936 934 992 999 1001 959

Kawardha 994 994 994 1001 1011 926 985 990 952

Korba 1007 1011 999 997 1011 970 960 971 944

Koriya 883 884 876 879 881 872 937 950 907

Mahasamund 941 933 1031 938 929 1027 1006 1008 990

Raigarh 994 1008 908 981 1000 868 986 987 979

Raipur 974 975 973 1001 992 1025 963 967 954

Rajnandgaon 1020 1032 934 1001 1024 860 988 988 989

Surguja 903 905 871 940 949 777 951 953 917
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

6
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh : Sex Ratio

980

970

960

950

940

930

920

910
Total Rural Urban

Sex Ratio at Birth Sex Ratio (0- 4 Years) Sex Ratio (All Ages)

Chhattisgarh : Sex Ratio


1050

1000

950

900
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

850

800

Sex Ratio at Birth Sex Ratio (0- 4 Years) Sex Ratio (All Ages)

7
CHHATTISGARH

EFFECTIVE LITERACY RATE


Person Male Female
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Chhattisgarh 76.4 73.1 88.8 85.6 83.1 94.5 67.1 62.8 82.8

Bastar 66.3 64.4 86.4 75.1 73.5 91.7 57.3 55.1 81.0

Bilaspur 78.8 73.0 90.1 87.7 83.7 95.4 69.5 61.7 84.4

Dantewada 52.3 47.7 85.5 60.2 55.8 92.3 44.5 39.7 78.7

Dhamtari 84.3 83.9 87.3 92.7 92.5 94.0 75.8 75.2 80.7

Durg 83.5 80.8 88.2 91.1 89.7 93.4 75.7 72.0 82.5

Janjgir-Champa 77.1 76.0 86.6 87.6 86.8 93.5 66.4 65.0 78.9

Jashpur 71.3 70.5 92.1 81.1 80.5 95.9 61.3 60.3 87.7

Kanker 81.4 80.8 94.8 89.9 89.5 98.4 72.9 72.1 90.9

Kawardha 72.3 69.3 90.5 84.9 82.8 97.7 59.4 55.7 82.9

Korba 79.7 72.7 89.9 88.1 82.7 95.7 70.9 62.2 83.8

Koriya 74.8 68.3 90.2 83.3 77.8 95.8 65.8 58.3 83.9

Mahasamund 76.0 75.2 83.2 87.2 86.7 91.3 64.9 63.7 75.0

Raigarh 75.8 73.8 87.4 86.3 84.7 96.3 65.1 62.8 78.4

Raipur 78.6 74.7 87.6 87.3 84.8 92.9 69.5 64.2 82.0

Rajnandgaon 81.7 79.6 91.7 89.4 88.0 96.4 73.9 71.0 87.1

Surguja 68.7 66.5 93.0 79.7 77.9 99.5 57.1 54.5 86.1
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

8
CHHATTISGARH

MARRIAGE
Marriages among Marriages among Males Currently Married Women
Females below legal age below legal age aged 20-24 years married
State / District
(18 years) (%)# (21 years) (%)# before legal age (18 years) (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 4.3 4.8 2.5 11.4 13.2 5.1 33.1 34.8 23.9
Bastar 1.4 1.2 3.6 11.7 12.6 5.3 46.1 44.8 59.2
Bilaspur 6.3 7.9 3.5 11.8 16.0 5.1 39.3 43.6 25.8
Dantewada 3.5 3.9 2.6 15.3 17.7 8.3 35.5 39.1 7.0
Dhamtari 2.3 2.3 2.7 7.0 7.4 3.5 18.1 18.3 15.9
Durg 3.2 3.6 2.4 7.5 9.7 3.6 24.3 26.3 18.9
Janjgir-Champa 4.3 4.5 2.5 10.1 10.7 3.0 28.2 29.9 2.7
Jashpur 8.8 8.9 - 16.0 16.4 - 39.1 38.3 -
Kanker 2.9 3.0 - 4.6 4.7 - 23.4 23.9 -
Kawardha 11.9 12.7 - 27.3 30.9 - 52.2 54.3 -
Korba 3.7 4.5 2.5 9.6 12.0 6.4 30.2 32.6 25.6
Koriya 7.7 9.9 2.1 16.2 20.8 5.1 50.3 54.7 31.4
Mahasamund 2.0 2.2 0.0 9.8 10.3 5.2 21.5 21.3 24.1
Raigarh 1.4 1.3 2.4 10.7 11.7 5.6 25.0 25.4 21.5
Raipur 3.6 4.2 2.0 10.8 12.7 5.4 29.6 31.1 23.8
Rajnandgaon 2.2 2.2 2.2 6.3 6.7 4.6 24.1 25.1 16.6
Surguja 8.0 8.7 1.0 21.9 23.3 7.5 47.2 48.0 34.6
# Based on marriages taken place during 2009-2011

Currently Married
Mean age at Marriage#
Men aged 25-29 years
State / District married before legal age
Male Female
( 21 years) (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 30.6 33.4 17.6 24.1 23.5 26.0 21.2 20.9 22.2
Bastar 38.1 38.5 32.9 24.4 24.1 26.0 21.6 21.4 23.0
Bilaspur 31.8 38.3 15.3 24.6 23.4 26.6 21.3 20.7 22.4
Dantewada 33.3 37.5 4.1 24.6 24.1 26.0 21.4 21.1 22.1
Dhamtari 17.8 18.2 13.8 24.0 23.9 25.0 20.8 20.8 21.3
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 23.9 27.8 14.7 24.5 23.6 26.3 21.0 20.6 21.9
Janjgir-Champa 25.8 26.2 21.6 24.2 24.0 26.4 21.4 21.2 22.6
Jashpur 33.5 33.9 - 23.7 23.6 - 21.1 21.0 -
Kanker 18.8 19.0 - 25.4 25.3 - 21.9 21.9 -
Kawardha 55.8 60.0 - 22.4 21.8 - 20.4 20.1 -
Korba 27.0 32.8 17.4 24.2 23.5 25.2 21.0 20.5 21.7
Koriya 49.4 55.2 27.2 24.4 23.5 26.7 21.3 20.9 22.6
Mahasamund 23.2 24.1 12.7 23.6 23.5 24.8 21.2 21.1 22.2
Raigarh 27.6 28.9 17.8 24.0 23.6 25.8 21.2 21.0 22.4
Raipur 27.0 29.5 19.8 24.0 23.5 25.5 21.3 21.0 22.2
Rajnandgaon 24.4 26.3 10.5 24.4 23.9 26.7 21.4 21.1 22.8
Surguja 47.3 48.5 28.8 22.7 22.4 25.7 20.5 20.3 22.9
# Based on marriages taken place during 2009-2011

9
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

10
Chhattisgarh: Mean age at Marriage (based on marriages taken place during 2009-2011)

28
CHHATTISGARH

24

20

16

12

Male Female
CHHATTISGARH

SCHOOLING STATUS
Children currently attending School (Age 6-17 years) (%)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 94.3 93.8 96.2 94.1 93.7 95.5 94.5 93.9 96.9
Bastar 94.0 93.6 98.0 94.2 94.0 97.3 93.7 93.2 98.6
Bilaspur 93.2 92.6 94.5 93.1 92.9 93.4 93.3 92.3 95.6
Dantewada 88.6 87.7 97.0 90.0 89.4 95.9 87.1 85.9 98.1
Dhamtari 95.0 95.1 93.7 94.1 94.4 91.5 95.9 95.9 95.8
Durg 95.3 94.5 97.1 94.8 93.9 96.4 95.9 95.1 97.9
Janjgir-Champa 95.1 95.0 96.2 95.1 95.0 96.1 95.1 95.0 96.3
Jashpur 93.8 93.7 - 93.4 93.2 - 94.3 94.1 -
Kanker 97.5 97.4 - 97.3 97.2 - 97.7 97.7 -
Kawardha 93.3 92.8 - 94.0 93.6 - 92.5 91.9 -
Korba 94.8 93.7 96.6 94.6 93.4 96.3 95.1 93.9 96.9
Koriya 96.8 96.3 97.9 96.6 96.2 97.7 96.9 96.4 98.2
Mahasamund 93.4 93.5 92.7 93.3 93.2 93.6 93.6 93.8 91.7
Raigarh 93.6 93.2 96.3 93.2 92.8 96.0 94.1 93.6 96.7
Raipur 94.5 94.0 95.8 94.2 93.8 95.2 94.7 94.1 96.4
Rajnandgaon 96.2 96.1 96.3 95.8 95.9 94.7 96.6 96.4 98.1
Surguja 93.5 93.2 97.7 93.2 92.9 97.0 93.8 93.4 98.6

Children attended before / Drop out (Age 6-17 years) (%)


State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 4.6 4.9 3.4 5.0 5.2 4.0 4.2 4.5 2.7
Bastar 3.6 3.8 1.6 3.7 3.8 2.3 3.6 3.8 1.0
Bilaspur 5.4 5.7 4.8 5.8 5.8 5.7 5.0 5.5 3.7
Dantewada 4.8 5.1 2.4 5.0 5.2 3.3 4.7 5.0 1.6
Dhamtari 4.9 4.8 6.0 5.8 5.5 8.2 4.0 4.0 3.9
Durg 4.3 5.1 2.6 4.9 5.8 3.2 3.8 4.5 2.0
Janjgir-Champa 4.0 4.1 3.5 4.2 4.3 3.6 3.8 3.9 3.4
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Jashpur 5.0 5.1 - 5.6 5.8 - 4.3 4.4 -


Kanker 2.4 2.4 - 2.5 2.6 - 2.2 2.2 -
Kawardha 5.4 5.7 - 5.0 5.3 - 5.7 6.2 -
Korba 4.4 5.5 2.9 4.7 5.8 3.3 4.1 5.2 2.5
Koriya 2.9 3.2 1.9 3.0 3.3 2.2 2.7 3.1 1.6
Mahasamund 6.0 6.0 5.9 6.3 6.4 5.2 5.8 5.7 6.6
Raigarh 6.0 6.5 3.2 6.5 7.0 3.4 5.5 5.9 3.0
Raipur 4.7 5.1 3.8 5.1 5.4 4.3 4.3 4.7 3.2
Rajnandgaon 3.7 3.7 3.5 4.1 3.9 5.0 3.2 3.5 1.9
Surguja 4.8 5.0 1.8 5.4 5.6 2.3 4.2 4.4 1.1

11
CHHATTISGARH

WORK STATUS
Children aged 5-14 years engaged in work (%)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 2.7 2.9 1.8 2.8 2.9 2.1 2.6 2.8 1.5
Bastar 3.8 4.0 1.4 3.9 4.0 2.0 3.7 3.9 0.7
Bilaspur 2.6 2.8 2.1 2.7 2.8 2.7 2.5 2.9 1.4
Dantewada 5.4 5.6 3.3 5.1 5.3 3.1 5.7 5.9 3.5
Dhamtari 1.0 1.0 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.2 0.9 0.9 1.2
Durg 2.5 2.9 1.7 2.3 2.6 1.7 2.7 3.1 1.8
Janjgir-Champa 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.5 2.5 3.0 2.7 2.8 1.9
Jashpur 2.7 2.7 - 2.5 2.5 - 2.9 2.9 -
Kanker 1.6 1.7 - 1.8 1.9 - 1.4 1.5 -
Kawardha 2.2 2.3 - 1.8 1.7 - 2.7 2.9 -
Korba 1.9 2.4 1.1 2.2 2.9 1.1 1.5 1.8 1.0
Koriya 2.7 2.1 4.5 3.3 2.9 4.4 2.0 1.3 4.5
Mahasamund 2.1 2.0 3.3 1.5 1.2 4.1 2.8 2.9 2.4
Raigarh 3.1 3.1 2.7 4.7 4.8 4.1 1.4 1.4 1.3
Raipur 2.5 2.8 1.5 2.4 2.6 1.7 2.6 3.1 1.2
Rajnandgaon 1.4 1.4 1.0 1.3 1.4 0.9 1.5 1.5 1.1
Surguja 4.0 4.2 1.6 4.5 4.7 2.1 3.5 3.7 1.0

Work Participation Rate (15 years and above)


State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 54.4 57.5 43.5 72.8 74.0 68.6 35.5 40.7 17.3
Bastar 61.0 63.6 35.4 72.0 73.7 55.6 50.1 53.6 15.3
Bilaspur 51.7 56.5 42.9 70.9 73.1 66.9 31.3 38.8 17.7
Dantewada 54.8 56.2 45.2 79.0 80.3 70.2 31.3 33.0 19.7
Dhamtari 64.4 66.1 51.1 73.0 73.3 71.0 55.6 58.9 31.4
Durg 56.9 65.4 42.5 72.2 74.4 68.6 41.3 56.3 15.4
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 54.5 56.0 42.1 69.2 69.7 65.0 39.3 41.9 18.8
Jashpur 47.3 47.4 - 76.4 76.9 - 17.5 17.4 -
Kanker 60.3 61.0 - 73.0 73.4 - 47.6 48.6 -
Kawardha 62.1 65.0 - 74.4 75.3 - 49.6 54.5 -
Korba 45.6 47.8 42.5 72.2 74.0 69.7 17.5 20.3 13.5
Koriya 42.5 44.5 37.9 71.0 73.9 64.7 12.2 13.7 8.8
Mahasamund 63.0 64.8 48.1 76.4 76.7 74.3 49.9 53.2 22.1
Raigarh 51.9 53.1 44.3 73.7 74.1 71.7 29.7 31.9 16.6
Raipur 51.7 54.0 46.4 71.3 71.1 71.9 31.2 36.3 19.7
Rajnandgaon 64.7 68.7 46.4 75.4 76.7 69.0 53.9 60.6 23.9
Surguja 46.3 47.1 37.9 73.8 74.8 63.6 17.9 18.6 10.6

12
CHHATTISGARH

DISABILITY
Prevalence of any type of Disability (Per 100,000 Population)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 1871 1972 1495 2150 2264 1729 1583 1672 1249
Bastar 1409 1418 1314 1453 1463 1344 1365 1372 1283
Bilaspur 2229 2580 1524 2612 2984 1869 1825 2156 1159
Dantewada 1053 894 2244 1107 924 2450 1000 864 2033
Dhamtari 2062 2094 1804 2425 2465 2110 1693 1718 1501
Durg 1554 1788 1135 1771 2028 1318 1333 1546 945
Janjgir-Champa 2399 2375 2602 2682 2672 2773 2106 2068 2426
Jashpur 1996 1989 - 2343 2340 - 1638 1629 -
Kanker 1674 1694 - 1979 2002 - 1365 1382 -
Kawardha 2428 2492 - 2868 2894 - 1980 2083 -
Korba 1693 1805 1523 1969 2129 1729 1404 1469 1304
Koriya 2099 2192 1871 2424 2586 2033 1751 1775 1691
Mahasamund 1568 1593 1348 1694 1724 1431 1442 1462 1264
Raigarh 2196 2235 1958 2724 2768 2458 1660 1694 1448
Raipur 1793 2014 1267 2026 2300 1377 1551 1718 1151
Rajnandgaon 2239 2204 2415 2654 2592 2959 1818 1810 1861
Surguja 1778 1835 1107 2024 2081 1359 1519 1576 832

Chhattisgarh: Prevalence of any type of Disability (Per 100,000 Population)

2500

2000

Total
1500
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Rural
Urban

1000

500

0
Person Male Female

13
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

14
Chhattisgarh: Prevalence of any type of Disability (Per 100,000 Population)
CHHATTISGARH

2500

2000

1500

1000

500

0
CHHATTISGARH

INJURY
Number of Injured Persons by type of Treatment received (Per 100,000 Population)
Severe
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 260 257 271 369 365 382 149 147 155
Bastar 89 91 71 118 119 112 60 63 29
Bilaspur 223 209 250 305 298 317 137 116 179
Dantewada 285 129 1452 394 181 1965 177 79 926
Dhamtari 304 297 353 475 473 494 130 119 212
Durg 145 136 162 186 163 228 103 108 94
Janjgir-Champa 529 534 493 737 736 744 315 324 233
Jashpur 273 275 - 405 407 - 137 139 -
Kanker 350 357 - 495 509 - 204 204 -
Kawardha 1046 1065 - 1387 1381 - 698 744 -
Korba 350 330 381 516 510 525 176 143 227
Koriya 215 182 299 300 257 404 125 102 182
Mahasamund 159 156 188 263 258 311 55 54 63
Raigarh 385 376 440 548 536 622 219 214 255
Raipur 175 188 144 257 271 224 90 102 60
Rajnandgaon 164 151 231 237 207 388 90 94 72
Surguja 247 231 432 368 354 530 119 102 326

Number of Injured Persons by type of Treatment received (Per 100,000 Population)


Major
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 229 224 248 335 329 359 119 116 132
Bastar 110 114 71 162 167 112 58 61 29
Bilaspur 288 278 307 395 381 422 175 169 185
Dantewada 129 89 424 163 104 596 95 74 249
Dhamtari 548 560 459 778 799 610 315 316 310
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 137 121 164 202 168 262 70 74 63


Janjgir-Champa 474 468 527 667 660 721 275 269 327
Jashpur 257 263 - 397 405 - 113 117 -
Kanker 284 282 - 435 436 - 131 126 -
Kawardha 356 382 - 484 531 - 226 230 -
Korba 203 174 248 310 273 365 92 71 124
Koriya 260 228 338 351 307 455 163 144 210
Mahasamund 219 194 439 344 322 529 94 65 348
Raigarh 367 357 425 531 516 622 200 196 223
Raipur 135 125 160 238 235 245 29 11 71
Rajnandgaon 283 265 373 407 376 564 157 152 179
Surguja 98 93 156 144 133 265 50 51 36

15
CHHATTISGARH

INJURY
Number of Injured Persons by type of Treatment received (Per 100,000 Population)
Minor
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 503 453 690 723 647 1004 277 254 361
Bastar 147 158 29 184 198 28 109 116 29
Bilaspur 610 338 1155 817 428 1595 392 244 688
Dantewada 172 176 145 198 204 155 147 148 136
Dhamtari 1877 1918 1558 2781 2840 2308 962 981 816
Durg 388 259 620 556 354 914 216 163 313
Janjgir-Champa 402 418 264 488 503 361 313 331 163
Jashpur 804 780 - 1278 1239 - 314 307 -
Kanker 406 392 - 530 514 - 281 269 -
Kawardha 252 276 - 367 407 - 135 144 -
Korba 429 191 790 628 260 1179 221 119 376
Koriya 362 261 610 513 354 897 200 163 293
Mahasamund 452 398 925 681 595 1431 221 199 411
Raigarh 947 899 1243 1418 1355 1805 468 435 668
Raipur 305 304 305 449 444 459 155 160 143
Rajnandgaon 1150 1108 1358 1715 1638 2096 577 570 608
Surguja 190 198 104 280 290 166 96 101 36

Chhattisgarh: Number of Injured Persons by type of Treatment received


(Per 100,000 Population)

800

700

600
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

500 Person
Male
400 Female

300

200

100

0
Severe Major Minor

16
Chhattisgarh: Number of Injured Persons by type of Treatment received (Per 100,000 Population)

1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0

Severe Major
CHHATTISGARH

17
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

ACUTE ILLNESS
Persons suffering from Acute Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
Diarrhoea/Dysentery
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 841 925 529 828 912 516 855 938 543
Bastar 1043 1109 328 1055 1131 252 1030 1087 408
Bilaspur 708 594 937 679 567 903 739 622 974
Dantewada 2149 2384 391 2093 2320 419 2205 2448 362
Dhamtari 2259 2438 861 2323 2491 989 2195 2383 734
Durg 463 566 278 461 574 262 466 559 296
Janjgir-Champa 816 856 470 818 841 631 813 873 303
Jashpur 1018 1000 - 1046 1038 - 990 960 -
Kanker 396 409 - 402 420 - 389 397 -
Kawardha 2010 2257 - 1915 2141 - 2107 2375 -
Korba 920 1180 526 893 1136 530 949 1226 521
Koriya 1081 1205 776 1058 1200 720 1105 1211 838
Mahasamund 746 776 486 722 769 311 771 783 664
Raigarh 880 900 763 855 873 747 906 926 780
Raipur 286 253 364 254 221 334 319 287 395
Rajnandgaon 1292 1423 639 1356 1484 722 1226 1361 555
Surguja 688 696 588 655 663 563 722 731 615

Persons suffering from Acute Illness (Per 100,000 Population)


Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI)
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 3252 3080 3892 3143 2999 3671 3364 3163 4125
Bastar 880 890 771 858 881 616 903 900 933
Bilaspur 4945 4476 5885 4500 4040 5418 5414 4934 6381
Dantewada 433 397 703 463 433 684 403 361 723
Dhamtari 12212 11792 15505 11576 11238 14257 12857 12355 16740
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 1545 1476 1668 1556 1536 1593 1533 1416 1746
Janjgir-Champa 4530 4554 4322 4402 4368 4689 4662 4746 3942
Jashpur 5692 5432 - 5504 5251 - 5886 5618 -
Kanker 2443 2467 - 2288 2300 - 2601 2635 -
Kawardha 4097 2965 - 4135 3001 - 4057 2928 -
Korba 3121 1621 5397 2944 1499 5107 3306 1747 5706
Koriya 1304 1352 1187 1358 1403 1250 1246 1298 1118
Mahasamund 1896 1701 3590 1843 1668 3359 1949 1734 3824
Raigarh 6471 6149 8440 6184 5920 7794 6762 6381 9100
Raipur 2783 2713 2949 2694 2688 2708 2876 2740 3202
Rajnandgaon 2897 2918 2796 2827 2846 2730 2969 2990 2863
Surguja 1779 1678 2975 1985 1894 3048 1562 1452 2895

18
CHHATTISGARH

ACUTE ILLNESS
Persons suffering from Acute Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
Fever (All Types)
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 6253 6178 6534 6071 6032 6217 6440 6327 6866
Bastar 1903 1900 1928 1737 1748 1624 2071 2055 2245
Bilaspur 3459 4206 1962 3488 4408 1653 3429 3994 2289
Dantewada 5201 5382 3852 5056 5236 3731 5346 5526 3977
Dhamtari 4129 4319 2640 4146 4309 2851 4111 4328 2431
Durg 4111 4259 3844 3941 4108 3645 4284 4411 4052
Janjgir-Champa 9323 8849 13344 9062 8623 12782 9593 9082 13926
Jashpur 10033 10234 - 9837 10045 - 10235 10428 -
Kanker 3450 3486 - 3245 3289 - 3658 3686 -
Kawardha 8770 9286 - 8390 8904 - 9157 9674 -
Korba 6780 7029 6402 6542 6726 6266 7030 7344 6548
Koriya 4878 5477 3410 4568 5124 3233 5211 5850 3605
Mahasamund 18010 11630 73538 17743 11384 72815 18280 11878 74273
Raigarh 10047 10750 5750 9954 10675 5554 10143 10826 5950
Raipur 2525 2885 1668 2431 2805 1550 2621 2967 1793
Rajnandgaon 13756 10136 31727 13180 9673 30580 14340 10606 32892
Surguja 6295 6491 3979 6191 6416 3579 6405 6569 4415

Persons suffering from Acute Illness (Per 100,000 Population)


Any type of Acute Illness
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 10724 10529 11450 10406 10275 10889 11051 10789 12039
Bastar 4655 4711 4056 4392 4474 3527 4921 4950 4606
Bilaspur 9818 9749 9956 9396 9530 9130 10261 9978 10831
Dantewada 8237 8560 5817 8020 8346 5629 8452 8773 6010
Dhamtari 19132 19116 19260 18524 18549 18329 19749 19693 20183
Durg 6508 6650 6253 6334 6543 5963 6686 6758 6555
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 14853 14452 18251 14447 14003 18215 15272 14916 18288
Jashpur 17074 16932 - 16737 16623 - 17421 17249 -
Kanker 6452 6525 - 6090 6167 - 6820 6887 -
Kawardha 15471 15055 - 15011 14577 - 15941 15539 -
Korba 11010 10007 12532 10579 9530 12151 11461 10502 12938
Koriya 7542 8332 5606 7259 8021 5431 7846 8660 5799
Mahasamund 20789 14254 77661 20439 13960 76547 21142 14550 78793
Raigarh 17579 17998 15015 17163 17658 14141 18002 18343 15908
Raipur 5721 5983 5098 5527 5864 4732 5923 6107 5482
Rajnandgaon 18358 14914 35455 17740 14424 34191 18985 15411 36739
Surguja 9252 9298 8718 9273 9367 8184 9231 9225 9301

19
CHHATTISGARH

ACUTE ILLNESS
Persons suffering from Acute Illness and taking treatment from Any Source (%)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 99.4 99.4 99.5 99.5 99.5 99.4 99.3 99.2 99.5
Bastar 99.7 99.8 97.9 99.7 99.9 97.6 99.7 99.8 98.1
Bilaspur 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9 99.9
Dantewada 99.7 99.8 98.1 99.7 99.8 98.0 99.6 99.8 98.1
Dhamtari 99.7 99.9 98.7 99.7 99.9 98.3 99.8 99.9 99.0
Durg 99.9 99.9 99.8 99.8 99.9 99.7 99.9 99.9 99.9
Janjgir-Champa 100.0 100.0 99.9 100.0 100.0 99.9 100.0 100.0 100.0
Jashpur 96.3 96.5 - 96.5 96.7 - 96.2 96.3 -
Kanker 99.8 99.9 - 99.9 99.9 - 99.8 99.8 -
Kawardha 99.9 100.0 - 99.9 99.9 - 99.9 100.0 -
Korba 98.1 96.5 100.0 99.1 98.4 100.0 97.1 94.8 100.0
Koriya 99.2 99.3 98.8 99.4 99.9 97.9 98.9 98.7 99.8
Mahasamund 99.5 99.5 99.5 99.5 99.5 99.5 99.6 99.6 99.6
Raigarh 100.0 100.0 99.9 100.0 100.0 99.9 100.0 100.0 99.9
Raipur 99.4 99.5 99.2 99.5 99.5 99.4 99.3 99.5 98.9
Rajnandgaon 99.5 99.6 99.1 99.4 99.6 99.1 99.5 99.7 99.2
Surguja 98.9 98.8 100.0 99.4 99.3 100.0 98.4 98.2 100.0

Persons suffering from Acute Illness and taking treatment from Government Source (%)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 29.9 29.4 31.5 28.4 29.0 26.2 31.3 29.7 36.6
Bastar 69.0 69.6 61.5 70.4 70.9 64.2 67.6 68.3 59.4
Bilaspur 27.6 21.0 40.4 27.4 21.1 40.6 27.7 21.0 40.1
Dantewada 54.2 56.9 24.3 53.1 55.9 21.6 55.3 57.8 26.8
Dhamtari 41.8 44.5 20.6 45.5 47.5 28.6 38.3 41.6 13.5
Durg 18.1 14.6 24.8 22.8 21.5 25.3 13.7 8.0 24.4
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 34.3 35.6 25.6 34.4 35.2 28.9 34.2 35.9 22.3
Jashpur 52.6 51.4 - 54.7 53.6 - 50.6 49.3 -
Kanker 32.5 32.1 - 33.1 32.6 - 31.9 31.5 -
Kawardha 17.4 9.1 - 17.6 8.9 - 17.1 9.3 -
Korba 23.3 21.8 25.0 22.2 21.1 23.4 24.3 22.4 26.6
Koriya 45.6 50.0 29.8 46.4 51.2 29.0 44.9 48.7 30.7
Mahasamund 10.8 6.6 17.6 1.4 1.9 0.5 20.0 11.2 34.4
Raigarh 32.1 29.7 49.9 33.3 31.2 49.4 30.9 28.2 50.4
Raipur 9.8 3.7 27.0 4.0 3.7 5.0 15.5 3.8 47.0
Rajnandgaon 32.0 31.3 33.3 31.3 34.2 25.2 32.6 28.6 41.0
Surguja 36.7 35.4 53.8 25.0 22.3 61.5 49.2 49.5 46.3

20
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Persons suffering from Diarrhoea/Dysentery


(Per 100,000 Population)
1200

1000

800
Total
Rural
600 Urban

400

200

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Persons suffering from Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI)


(Per 100,000 Population)
4500

4000

3500

3000 Total
Rural
2500 Urban

2000

1500

1000

500

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Persons suffering from Fever (All Types)


(Per 100,000 Population)
8000

7000

6000

5000 Total
Rural
4000 Urban

3000

2000

1000

0
Person Male Female
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Chhattisgarh: Persons suffering from any type of Acute Illness


(Per 100,000 Population)

14000

12000

10000
Total
8000 Rural
Urban
6000

4000

2000

0
Person Male Female

21
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Persons suffering from Acute Illness


(Per 100,000 Population)
8000

7000

6000

5000

4000

3000

2000

1000

0
Diarrhoea/Dysentery Acute Respiratory Infection Fever (All Types)
(ARI)

Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh: Persons suffering from Acute Illness (Per 100,000 Population)


25000

20000

15000

10000
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

5000

Diarrhoea/Dysentery Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI) Fever (All Types)

22
CHHATTISGARH

CHRONIC ILLNESS
Having any kind of Symptoms of Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 4176 3842 5420 4020 3741 5047 4337 3946 5812
Bastar 1991 1939 2542 1962 1927 2324 2021 1952 2770
Bilaspur 4325 3541 5896 4004 3373 5265 4662 3718 6566
Dantewada 1940 1650 4109 1898 1648 3731 1982 1652 4496
Dhamtari 9867 9930 9372 8605 8630 8406 11146 11252 10328
Durg 3785 3235 4771 3498 3011 4357 4078 3462 5203
Janjgir-Champa 5250 5170 5927 4895 4863 5162 5618 5488 6718
Jashpur 7352 7419 - 7167 7238 - 7543 7605 -
Kanker 3329 3255 - 3038 2969 - 3624 3545 -
Kawardha 4534 4380 - 5531 5580 - 3517 3161 -
Korba 4130 3129 5649 4131 3132 5628 4128 3125 5672
Koriya 4055 3928 4365 4050 3927 4345 4060 3930 4388
Mahasamund 4520 4270 6694 4291 4086 6065 4750 4455 7332
Raigarh 6461 6360 7079 6410 6351 6767 6514 6370 7397
Raipur 2753 1726 5197 2666 1686 4978 2844 1767 5428
Rajnandgaon 5291 4891 7279 5115 4790 6729 5470 4993 7838
Surguja 3077 2984 4169 3177 3099 4076 2971 2864 4271

Having any kind of Symptoms of Chronic Illness and sought Medical Care (%)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 87.5 84.8 94.5 87.2 84.7 94.0 87.8 85.0 94.9
Bastar 85.7 86.9 75.8 83.3 81.7 97.6 88.0 92.1 56.8
Bilaspur 90.6 85.2 97.1 88.6 84.1 94.3 92.4 86.3 99.4
Dantewada 70.3 65.2 85.6 73.1 69.2 85.8 67.6 61.2 85.4
Dhamtari 96.0 96.0 96.0 94.5 94.1 97.6 97.2 97.5 94.6
Durg 97.1 99.9 93.8 95.2 99.9 89.4 98.9 99.9 97.6
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 98.8 98.8 98.8 97.7 97.5 98.7 99.8 99.9 99.0
Jashpur 57.6 56.7 - 59.0 58.1 - 56.2 55.3 -
Kanker 92.3 91.8 - 91.8 91.2 - 92.8 92.3 -
Kawardha 93.6 94.1 - 95.4 96.2 - 90.8 90.3 -
Korba 79.1 62.3 93.2 79.0 60.6 94.3 79.2 64.1 91.9
Koriya 77.6 70.8 92.7 80.0 73.5 94.2 75.1 68.0 91.1
Mahasamund 85.9 86.3 83.6 85.9 86.0 85.1 85.9 86.5 82.3
Raigarh 92.0 91.4 95.3 91.2 90.6 94.7 92.8 92.2 95.9
Raipur 86.8 76.5 95.0 90.3 81.5 97.4 83.4 71.5 92.6
Rajnandgaon 93.2 92.2 96.2 93.8 93.4 95.0 92.6 91.1 97.3
Surguja 68.4 64.9 97.9 69.5 66.1 99.2 67.2 63.5 96.6

23
CHHATTISGARH

CHRONIC ILLNESS
Having diagnosed for Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
Diabetes
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 541 318 1373 664 403 1626 414 231 1107
Bastar 307 246 957 406 328 1232 206 164 671
Bilaspur 821 167 2133 943 222 2381 693 110 1870
Dantewada 186 134 569 227 164 684 145 105 452
Dhamtari 612 324 2870 720 352 3643 502 295 2105
Durg 722 567 1002 855 712 1108 587 420 891
Janjgir-Champa 293 282 390 341 328 451 244 234 327
Jashpur 290 255 - 351 291 - 227 217 -
Kanker 510 493 - 621 608 - 398 377 -
Kawardha 331 217 - 416 279 - 244 154 -
Korba 716 546 975 905 668 1260 519 419 671
Koriya 741 661 935 858 794 1010 616 521 852
Mahasamund 441 409 721 593 575 747 287 241 695
Raigarh 500 388 1188 649 516 1462 349 258 907
Raipur 608 96 1829 768 129 2275 443 61 1360
Rajnandgaon 572 439 1234 687 513 1550 455 363 913
Surguja 317 272 848 447 394 1060 180 144 615

Having diagnosed for Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)


Hypertension
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 571 336 1447 488 281 1249 657 393 1655
Bastar 220 134 1143 184 116 896 257 152 1399
Bilaspur 779 267 1807 668 233 1537 896 303 2093
Dantewada 128 60 636 118 50 618 138 70 655
Dhamtari 1042 910 2074 660 544 1582 1429 1283 2562
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 784 468 1350 680 451 1086 889 486 1625
Janjgir-Champa 433 407 653 370 341 609 499 475 700
Jashpur 232 217 - 212 203 - 252 231 -
Kanker 366 325 - 245 198 - 489 453 -
Kawardha 305 217 - 203 152 - 408 284 -
Korba 691 122 1554 660 126 1460 723 118 1654
Koriya 443 266 876 414 249 808 474 285 950
Mahasamund 529 457 1160 464 388 1120 596 526 1201
Raigarh 554 404 1471 446 310 1276 664 500 1670
Raipur 589 288 1307 534 246 1216 647 332 1404
Rajnandgaon 879 591 2308 718 483 1885 1041 699 2738
Surguja 354 226 1868 325 214 1624 383 238 2135

24
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Diabetes (Per 100,000 Population)

1800

1600

1400

1200
Total
1000 Rural
Urban
800

600

400

200

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Diabetes (Per 100,000 Population)

1000
900
800
700
600
500
400
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

300
200
100
0

25
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Hypertension (Per 100,000 Population)

1800

1600

1400

1200
Total
1000 Rural
Urban
800

600

400

200

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Hypertension (Per 100,000 Population)

1200

1000

800

600
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

400

200

26
CHHATTISGARH

CHRONIC ILLNESS
Having diagnosed for Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
Tuberculosis (TB)
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 190 193 181 245 256 204 133 127 156
Bastar 66 67 57 83 88 28 48 45 87
Bilaspur 145 105 226 193 146 285 96 62 162
Dantewada 116 101 223 130 126 155 102 76 294
Dhamtari 237 209 459 305 258 676 169 159 245
Durg 109 114 101 130 140 112 88 87 90
Janjgir-Champa 262 278 126 299 318 135 225 238 117
Jashpur 325 329 - 439 449 - 207 206 -
Kanker 151 148 - 173 173 - 128 123 -
Kawardha 253 266 - 384 421 - 120 108 -
Korba 235 283 163 267 331 172 202 233 154
Koriya 197 218 146 294 348 164 94 81 126
Mahasamund 244 248 204 290 302 187 197 194 221
Raigarh 321 280 574 405 349 747 236 209 398
Raipur 190 185 201 231 245 198 147 124 203
Rajnandgaon 161 175 89 242 266 123 78 83 54
Surguja 240 249 138 359 376 166 115 115 109

Having diagnosed for Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)


Asthma / Chronic Respiratory Disease
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 419 393 513 480 460 550 356 325 473
Bastar 256 271 100 332 353 112 180 188 87
Bilaspur 601 196 1413 684 236 1579 513 154 1237
Dantewada 470 484 368 588 617 375 353 351 362
Dhamtari 568 547 738 611 644 346 525 448 1126
Durg 589 784 239 592 783 253 586 785 224
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 387 406 229 484 525 135 287 283 327
Jashpur 565 581 - 669 697 - 457 462 -
Kanker 680 697 - 817 848 - 540 544 -
Kawardha 994 1121 - 1105 1239 - 880 1002 -
Korba 315 367 236 280 311 233 352 426 239
Koriya 553 700 192 602 779 177 501 616 210
Mahasamund 161 167 110 161 165 124 161 169 95
Raigarh 142 126 236 169 132 389 115 120 80
Raipur 257 99 634 283 118 673 231 81 592
Rajnandgaon 373 418 151 449 504 176 297 331 125
Surguja 277 293 86 448 478 99 97 99 72

27
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Tuberculosis (TB)


(Per 100,000 Population)
300

250

200
Total
Rural
150 Urban

100

50

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Tuberculosis (TB) (Per 100,000 Population)

400

350

300

250

200
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

150

100

50

28
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Asthma/Chronic Respiratory Disease


(Per 100,000 Population)

600

500

400
Total
Rural
300 Urban

200

100

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Asthma/Chronic Respiratory Disease (Per 100,000 Population)

1200

1000

800

600
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

400

200

29
CHHATTISGARH

CHRONIC ILLNESS
Having diagnosed for Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
Arthritis
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 600 609 566 439 457 373 765 764 770
Bastar 163 165 143 123 130 56 203 200 233
Bilaspur 562 425 837 387 314 533 746 542 1159
Dantewada 330 303 536 273 244 486 387 361 587
Dhamtari 1316 1355 1009 894 934 577 1744 1784 1436
Durg 507 564 405 295 335 223 724 794 596
Janjgir-Champa 1396 1456 894 1116 1176 609 1686 1745 1190
Jashpur 1017 1028 - 860 868 - 1179 1193 -
Kanker 372 371 - 219 220 - 527 523 -
Kawardha 519 549 - 365 375 - 676 725 -
Korba 570 403 824 419 299 598 729 511 1064
Koriya 368 390 312 319 357 227 420 426 405
Mahasamund 987 1016 737 708 732 498 1268 1301 980
Raigarh 762 798 543 699 742 436 827 856 652
Raipur 364 321 465 255 235 303 477 411 636
Rajnandgaon 926 985 630 624 664 423 1232 1311 841
Surguja 250 255 190 222 227 166 279 285 217

Having diagnosed for Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)


Any kind of Chronic Illness
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 3821 3279 5840 3774 3263 5660 3868 3296 6029
Bastar 2213 2126 3142 2155 2067 3080 2271 2185 3207
Bilaspur 5297 3646 8608 5124 3576 8216 5478 3720 9023
Dantewada 1542 1331 3115 1643 1458 3002 1441 1206 3231
Dhamtari 6886 6518 9774 6086 5666 9428 7697 7384 10116
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 4252 3812 5043 4080 3707 4739 4428 3918 5360
Janjgir-Champa 4088 3991 4907 3857 3833 4058 4327 4155 5785
Jashpur 4156 4130 - 4307 4278 - 3999 3978 -
Kanker 3632 3605 - 3493 3481 - 3772 3731 -
Kawardha 4083 3791 - 3706 3573 - 4469 4011 -
Korba 3690 2808 5028 3680 2842 4934 3701 2772 5129
Koriya 4391 3866 5679 4453 3998 5544 4325 3727 5827
Mahasamund 3778 3683 4609 3691 3614 4355 3866 3751 4867
Raigarh 3981 3696 5726 4108 3817 5881 3852 3572 5568
Raipur 2860 1687 5651 2966 1751 5833 2751 1622 5461
Rajnandgaon 4224 3931 5681 4036 3752 5443 4415 4112 5923
Surguja 2954 2813 4619 3353 3225 4838 2534 2381 4379

30
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Arthritis (Per 100,000 Population)

900

800

700

600
Total
500 Rural
Urban
400

300

200

100

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for Arthritis ( Per 100,000 Population)


1600

1400

1200

1000

800

600
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

400

200

31
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for any kind of Chronic Illness


(Per 100,000 Population)
7000

6000

5000
Total
4000 Rural
Urban
3000

2000

1000

0
Person Male Female

Chhattisgarh: Having diagnosed for any kind of Chronic Illness (Per 100,000 Population)
8000

7000

6000

5000

4000
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

3000

2000

1000

32
CHHATTISGARH

CHRONIC ILLNESS
Having diagnosed for any kind of Chronic Illness and getting Regular Treatment (%)
State / District Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 53.7 47.4 66.9 52.8 46.0 67.1 54.7 48.9 66.7
Bastar 43.7 40.0 70.5 42.6 38.1 74.5 44.8 41.8 66.4
Bilaspur 57.4 52.6 61.6 57.8 52.3 62.7 57.0 52.8 60.5
Dantewada 31.8 25.0 53.8 32.6 26.7 53.7 31.0 22.9 53.8
Dhamtari 68.2 69.0 64.2 67.0 67.8 63.3 69.2 69.9 65.0
Durg 61.1 50.4 75.6 60.7 48.8 77.0 61.5 51.9 74.4
Janjgir-Champa 46.0 43.2 65.2 46.4 43.7 67.8 45.7 42.8 63.3
Jashpur 34.8 32.9 - 36.6 34.5 - 32.9 31.1 -
Kanker 47.8 46.0 - 44.3 42.2 - 51.1 49.6 -
Kawardha 44.0 38.9 - 42.8 38.9 - 45.1 38.9 -
Korba 50.0 29.4 67.4 51.4 29.1 70.7 48.4 29.6 64.1
Koriya 44.7 30.5 68.3 42.1 27.3 67.7 47.5 34.1 69.1
Mahasamund 53.0 53.8 47.3 52.0 52.8 46.4 53.9 54.8 48.1
Raigarh 53.7 48.6 73.8 53.3 48.1 73.8 54.2 49.3 73.7
Raipur 62.4 60.6 63.7 59.6 59.0 60.0 65.5 62.3 67.8
Rajnandgaon 57.8 54.2 70.3 56.5 51.6 73.1 59.1 56.6 67.7
Surguja 40.3 35.6 74.2 39.3 34.7 74.7 41.6 36.8 73.6

Having diagnosed for any kind of Chronic Illness and getting Regular Treatment
from Government Source (%)
State / District
Person Male Female
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 30.2 33.0 25.0 31.5 34.2 26.6 28.9 31.8 23.5
Bastar 55.6 56.3 51.9 55.9 56.1 55.0 55.4 56.5 48.6
Bilaspur 28.1 30.3 26.0 29.5 30.8 28.2 26.7 29.8 23.8
Dantewada 59.2 68.5 45.6 64.9 69.1 57.9 53.7 67.9 35.5
Dhamtari 23.3 24.2 17.3 23.3 23.7 21.0 23.3 24.6 14.0
Durg 20.8 19.9 21.9 21.5 19.8 23.3 20.3 19.9 20.7
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 28.2 30.2 16.0 29.9 31.4 20.4 26.7 29.2 12.8
Jashpur 57.0 58.7 - 56.0 58.1 - 58.3 59.4 -
Kanker 46.9 47.0 - 46.3 46.9 - 47.5 47.1 -
Kawardha 36.5 33.4 - 41.1 41.0 - 32.5 26.4 -
Korba 31.3 32.6 30.7 30.5 30.4 30.5 32.3 34.8 31.0
Koriya 65.4 76.3 53.0 65.5 77.4 51.7 65.4 75.3 54.2
Mahasamund 22.5 22.4 22.7 25.6 25.6 25.2 19.6 19.5 20.6
Raigarh 29.5 30.4 26.4 30.8 31.4 29.0 28.0 29.4 23.6
Raipur 18.8 25.1 13.4 20.0 24.5 15.8 17.5 25.8 11.0
Rajnandgaon 25.7 28.8 17.1 28.5 33.0 16.9 23.3 25.3 17.3
Surguja 46.0 45.4 48.8 46.8 46.2 49.6 45.0 44.4 47.7

33
CHHATTISGARH

FERTILITY
Crude Birth Rate(CBR) Natural Growth Rate Total Fertility Rate
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 23.2 24.1 19.8 15.9 16.4 14.0 2.7 2.9 2.1
Bastar 21.0 21.1 19.7 13.6 13.7 12.3 2.5 - -
Bilaspur 25.6 27.1 22.5 18.6 19.8 16.2 2.9 - -
Dantewada 23.9 24.0 23.3 15.4 15.6 14.2 2.7 - -
Dhamtari 21.3 21.7 18.4 13.8 14.2 10.8 2.5 - -
Durg 20.3 21.4 18.5 14.2 14.5 13.5 2.3 - -
Janjgir-Champa 20.7 21.0 18.2 13.4 13.5 12.7 2.6 - -
Jashpur 22.6 22.8 16.6 13.5 13.6 12.0 2.8 - -
Kanker 20.8 20.9 17.8 15.1 15.1 13.7 2.3 - -
Kawardha 29.4 30.7 21.3 20.9 22.0 14.4 3.6 - -
Korba 22.5 25.1 18.6 16.2 17.7 14.0 2.5 - -
Koriya 20.6 22.8 15.2 14.2 16.2 9.3 2.3 - -
Mahasamund 22.9 23.2 20.6 14.5 14.6 12.9 2.8 - -
Raigarh 21.5 21.7 20.0 13.7 13.7 14.1 2.5 - -
Raipur 25.2 26.5 21.9 18.4 19.4 15.9 2.9 - -
Rajnandgaon 24.0 25.3 17.6 16.4 17.5 10.9 2.8 - -
Surguja 26.2 27.1 15.4 17.6 18.2 10.7 3.2 - -

Women aged 20-24 reporting birth of Women reporting birth of order 3 &
State / District order 2 & above (%) above (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 42.8 44.1 36.1 28.0 29.6 20.1
Bastar 55.2 55.9 47.7 18.3 18.8 12.2
Bilaspur 41.6 44.3 32.8 32.1 35.7 21.5
Dantewada 43.7 45.9 30.1 36.8 38.9 19.2
Dhamtari 41.4 41.5 41.1 21.7 21.7 21.8
Durg 38.5 40.6 33.0 21.8 24.3 16.7
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 38.0 38.3 34.3 29.0 30.1 17.9


Jashpur 40.0 40.3 - 30.6 30.9 -
Kanker 37.6 37.5 - 18.4 18.5 -
Kawardha 51.3 52.3 - 32.8 34.1 -
Korba 34.1 33.9 34.5 28.8 32.2 22.1
Koriya 45.6 47.9 34.5 31.8 34.1 22.3
Mahasamund 38.2 37.8 43.7 23.5 23.9 19.5
Raigarh 41.1 41.5 37.1 28.3 29.3 21.3
Raipur 46.0 47.9 39.3 28.5 30.0 23.9
Rajnandgaon 44.2 45.0 37.4 26.0 27.6 15.5
Surguja 47.2 47.5 40.5 36.3 37.1 21.5

34
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Crude Birth Rate and Natural Growth Rate

30

25

20

15

10

0
Total Rural Urban

Crude Birth Rate Natural Growth Rate

Chhattisgarh: Crude Birth Rate and Natural Growth Rate


35

30

25

20

15

10
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Crude Birth Rate(CBR) Natural Growth Rate

35
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Total Fertility Rate

3.0

2.5

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5

0.0
Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh: Total Fertility Rate


4.0

3.5

3.0

2.5

2.0

1.5
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

1.0

0.5

0.0

36
CHHATTISGARH

FERTILITY
Women aged 15-19 years who were
Women with two children wanting no
already mothers or pregnant at the time
State / District more children (%)
of survey (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 34.0 33.9 34.2 40.2 40.1 40.9
Bastar 30.4 29.7 40.7 52.7 55.6 33.3
Bilaspur 38.2 31.4 52.7 47.7 48.4 45.5
Dantewada 35.6 34.9 41.2 39.9 36.4 50.0
Dhamtari 36.3 37.7 26.6 40.6 40.9 37.5
Durg 37.5 42.0 31.6 34.2 34.0 35.0
Janjgir-Champa 24.3 25.7 16.6 38.6 39.4 14.3
Jashpur 34.5 34.7 - 47.0 46.9 -
Kanker 44.4 43.5 - 51.2 50.8 -
Kawardha 10.4 10.2 - 44.5 45.5 -
Korba 20.9 23.2 16.6 33.5 32.8 35.1
Koriya 30.2 28.1 36.7 39.2 38.9 42.9
Mahasamund 37.1 39.4 21.6 48.6 48.1 60.0
Raigarh 33.6 32.2 40.0 37.9 36.5 52.9
Raipur 30.2 30.2 30.1 43.7 42.2 53.3
Rajnandgaon 46.4 47.5 42.8 35.0 34.0 41.2
Surguja 39.2 39.2 38.4 36.6 36.6 40.0

Chhattisgarh: Women aged 15-19 years who were already mothers or pregnant at the time of survey (%)

60

50

40
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

30

20

10

37
CHHATTISGARH

FERTILITY
Median age at first live Live Births taking place
Median age at first live birth
birth of Women aged after an interval of 36
State / District of Women aged 25-49 years
15-49 years months (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 21.7 21.4 22.8 21.0 20.9 22.0 46.4 46.1 48.1
Bastar 22.6 22.6 23.4 21.8 21.7 22.6 57.6 56.9 66.1
Bilaspur 21.9 21.4 22.8 21.2 20.7 22.0 47.2 47.3 46.8
Dantewada 23.1 23.2 22.8 22.3 22.3 21.9 31.5 29.8 46.4
Dhamtari 21.5 21.4 22.7 20.9 20.8 22.1 37.6 37.0 42.3
Durg 21.6 21.1 22.5 20.9 20.5 21.9 42.6 41.2 46.1
Janjgir-Champa 21.7 21.7 22.2 21.0 21.0 21.3 46.4 46.6 44.9
Jashpur 22.8 22.8 - 22.4 22.4 - 49.0 49.2 -
Kanker 22.2 22.2 - 21.3 21.3 - 53.8 54.3 -
Kawardha 20.5 20.3 - 20.2 20.1 - 51.0 50.8 -
Korba 22.4 22.0 22.8 21.8 21.5 22.2 52.1 52.2 51.8
Koriya 21.3 20.9 23.2 20.8 20.6 22.0 55.5 56.0 53.0
Mahasamund 22.0 22.0 22.7 21.5 21.4 21.8 45.7 46.5 37.5
Raigarh 21.7 21.5 23.0 21.0 20.9 22.2 51.4 50.8 56.6
Raipur 21.4 20.9 22.7 20.8 20.5 22.0 44.0 42.7 48.5
Rajnandgaon 21.4 21.0 24.2 20.9 20.7 23.8 42.8 42.9 41.8
Surguja 21.2 21.0 22.5 20.8 20.7 21.8 45.3 45.3 45.6

Mean number of Mean number of children Mean number of children


children ever born to surviving to Women aged ever born to Women aged
State / District
Women aged 15-49 years 15-49 years 45-49 years
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 2.5 2.6 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.2 3.2 3.3 2.8
Bastar 2.5 2.6 2.2 2.5 2.5 2.1 2.7 2.8 2.3
Bilaspur 2.6 2.8 2.2 2.5 2.6 2.1 3.2 3.6 2.7
Dantewada 2.5 2.5 2.0 2.4 2.5 2.0 3.1 3.2 2.4
Dhamtari 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.4 3.5 3.5 3.2
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 2.6 2.7 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.2 3.4 3.6 3.1
Janjgir-Champa 2.6 2.7 2.2 2.5 2.6 2.2 3.5 3.6 2.8
Jashpur 2.5 2.5 - 2.4 2.4 - 3.0 3.0 -
Kanker 2.3 2.3 - 2.3 2.3 - 2.9 3.0 -
Kawardha 2.7 2.8 - 2.6 2.6 - 3.6 3.7 -
Korba 2.5 2.6 2.4 2.4 2.5 2.3 3.5 3.7 3.3
Koriya 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.7 2.6 2.9
Mahasamund 2.6 2.6 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.3 3.5 3.5 3.5
Raigarh 2.4 2.5 2.2 2.3 2.3 2.1 3.2 3.2 2.6
Raipur 2.5 2.7 2.2 2.5 2.6 2.2 3.1 3.4 2.5
Rajnandgaon 2.4 2.5 2.1 2.3 2.4 2.1 2.9 3.0 2.7
Surguja 2.5 2.5 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.2 3.0 3.0 2.5

38
Chhattisgarh: Median age of Women at first live birth

24

22

20

18

16

14

12

10

Age15-49 years Age 25-49 years


CHHATTISGARH

39
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

ABORTION
Pregnancy to Women Women who went for
Women who received any
aged 15-49 years Ultrasound before abortion
State / District ANC before abortion (%)
resulting in abortion (%) (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 1.4 1.2 2.2 63.6 60.4 72.0 31.9 27.4 43.8
Bastar 0.4 0.4 0.6 57.1 52.5 100.0 14.9 16.5 0.0
Bilaspur 2.3 2.0 3.2 50.4 50.7 50.0 31.3 26.2 40.5
Dantewada 0.3 0.2 0.7 31.8 5.1 100.0 14.1 0.0 50.0
Dhamtari 2.7 2.7 2.8 67.3 69.0 53.3 29.8 31.0 20.0
Durg 1.2 1.0 1.6 66.0 54.9 80.0 38.5 24.2 56.7
Janjgir-Champa 0.9 0.9 0.6 58.0 55.4 100.0 31.9 27.7 100.0
Jashpur 2.2 2.1 - 44.7 42.9 - 25.0 25.0 -
Kanker 0.6 0.6 - 91.3 91.3 - 17.5 17.5 -
Kawardha 0.6 0.7 - 62.0 59.1 - 25.4 27.3 -
Korba 1.9 1.7 2.2 60.4 46.2 82.2 37.9 30.7 48.9
Koriya 2.3 2.3 2.3 67.5 69.7 58.3 37.1 38.1 33.3
Mahasamund 1.2 1.1 2.2 75.6 73.9 83.3 23.2 21.1 33.3
Raigarh 1.2 1.2 1.2 77.7 76.6 85.7 32.7 27.4 71.4
Raipur 1.3 1.0 2.3 69.0 61.6 79.4 33.4 25.7 44.1
Rajnandgaon 2.4 1.8 5.9 75.1 71.7 82.1 29.9 27.0 35.7
Surguja 1.2 1.2 2.2 61.3 63.7 40.0 34.8 34.3 40.0

Average Month of
Abortion performed by Abortion taking place in
pregnancy at the time of
State / District skilled health personnel (%) Institution (%)
abortion
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 3.3 3.5 3.0 42.8 37.8 56.5 33.8 27.3 51.4
Bastar 3.3 3.4 2.5 22.1 24.5 0.0 14.9 16.5 0.0
Bilaspur 3.1 3.3 2.8 33.2 31.8 35.7 27.0 23.4 33.3
Dantewada 4.0 4.3 3.0 35.5 10.3 100.0 35.5 10.3 100.0
Dhamtari 3.4 3.4 2.9 48.8 49.1 46.7 19.9 17.5 40.0
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 3.1 3.7 2.3 57.2 54.9 60.0 45.3 36.3 56.7
Janjgir-Champa 3.5 3.5 3.0 38.0 34.2 100.0 18.9 14.0 100.0
Jashpur 3.7 3.6 - 36.6 34.3 - 29.2 26.4 -
Kanker 2.7 2.7 - 30.0 30.0 - 30.0 30.0 -
Kawardha 4.2 4.2 - 59.1 63.6 - 33.8 36.4 -
Korba 3.3 3.3 3.3 39.8 32.5 51.1 35.5 26.8 48.9
Koriya 3.1 3.2 2.7 45.9 44.9 50.0 39.0 34.3 58.3
Mahasamund 3.6 3.5 4.2 41.3 39.5 50.0 46.8 46.1 50.0
Raigarh 3.7 3.8 2.4 32.2 24.9 85.7 34.6 27.6 85.7
Raipur 3.3 3.5 3.1 51.8 36.3 73.5 40.9 26.1 61.8
Rajnandgaon 3.3 3.3 3.4 47.3 39.0 64.3 40.6 34.3 53.6
Surguja 3.4 3.4 3.4 37.6 37.4 40.0 26.9 25.5 40.0

40
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Pregnancy to Women aged 15-49 years resulting in abortion (%)

Chhattisgarh: Abortion where ultrasound was performed/ Abortion performed by skilled health personnel (%)
70

60

50

40

30
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

20

10

Ultrasound before abortion Performed by skilled health personnel

41
CHHATTISGARH

FAMILY PLANNING PRACTICES (CMW AGED 15-49 YEARS)


Current Usage
State / District Any Method (%) Any Modern Method (%) Female Sterilization (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 60.7 60.3 61.9 57.2 56.7 59.0 49.5 50.1 47.3
Bastar 66.4 67.6 53.5 48.2 47.7 53.5 33.9 32.5 48.6
Bilaspur 63.1 63.4 62.5 56.1 54.2 60.0 47.2 47.1 47.3
Dantewada 37.4 34.9 54.8 36.1 33.7 52.7 24.9 22.6 40.2
Dhamtari 67.3 68.0 62.1 65.4 66.0 60.4 58.8 59.5 52.9
Durg 67.0 69.4 62.6 66.0 68.9 60.8 61.0 65.7 52.4
Janjgir-Champa 61.3 62.0 55.2 60.1 60.7 54.8 52.1 53.3 41.6
Jashpur 55.1 54.8 - 53.3 53.0 - 46.9 47.1 -
Kanker 64.5 64.3 - 63.5 63.3 - 57.5 57.3 -
Kawardha 74.7 73.0 - 62.0 62.3 - 54.9 56.0 -
Korba 54.1 48.9 61.6 49.7 45.6 55.6 41.3 38.7 45.0
Koriya 45.9 46.3 44.7 45.0 45.3 44.2 41.2 41.7 39.7
Mahasamund 72.5 73.4 64.1 68.3 69.1 59.9 58.2 59.4 46.2
Raigarh 61.2 61.5 59.4 60.1 60.4 57.7 57.0 58.9 44.1
Raipur 61.0 59.3 65.2 59.7 58.4 62.9 52.2 54.3 47.1
Rajnandgaon 62.4 63.8 55.1 61.9 63.7 52.2 53.8 56.4 39.3
Surguja 46.5 44.8 66.9 44.2 42.6 63.0 35.6 34.6 47.2

Current Usage
State / District Male Sterilization (%) Copper-T/IUD (%) Pills (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 1.1 1.2 0.8 0.6 0.5 0.9 1.2 1.2 1.5
Bastar 3.8 4.0 1.1 1.4 1.5 0.0 2.7 2.9 0.0
Bilaspur 0.7 0.7 0.5 0.8 0.5 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.6
Dantewada 3.8 4.3 0.4 0.6 0.5 1.6 1.9 1.7 3.3
Dhamtari 0.7 0.6 1.9 0.9 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.1 0.1
Durg 1.4 1.5 1.3 0.5 0.1 1.1 0.2 0.2 0.3
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 0.7 0.8 0.0 1.1 0.9 2.5 0.8 0.8 1.1
Jashpur 0.6 0.5 - 0.2 0.2 - 1.4 1.2 -
Kanker 1.8 1.8 - 0.4 0.4 - 0.3 0.3 -
Kawardha 0.6 0.6 - 0.2 0.1 - 2.5 2.6 -
Korba 0.6 0.3 1.0 0.7 0.7 0.8 1.4 2.3 0.0
Koriya 0.2 0.1 0.4 0.6 0.3 1.3 0.9 0.9 0.9
Mahasamund 2.0 2.1 0.4 1.4 1.4 1.1 1.6 1.4 3.9
Raigarh 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.6 0.9 0.8 1.6
Raipur 0.6 0.8 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.3 1.9 1.2 3.6
Rajnandgaon 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.5 0.6 0.0 1.8 1.9 0.9
Surguja 1.0 0.9 3.1 0.5 0.4 0.9 0.7 0.6 2.6

42
CHHATTISGARH

FAMILY PLANNING PRACTICES (CMW AGED 15-49 YEARS)


Current Usage
Emergency Contraceptive
State / District Condom/Nirodh (%) Any Traditional Method (%)
Pills (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 3.6 2.7 7.0 0.5 0.5 0.3 3.5 3.6 2.9
Bastar 6.1 6.3 3.8 0.3 0.3 0.0 18.2 19.9 0.0
Bilaspur 5.8 4.3 8.9 0.2 0.2 0.2 7.0 9.2 2.5
Dantewada 4.3 4.0 6.5 0.2 0.2 0.6 1.3 1.2 2.1
Dhamtari 4.5 4.8 2.2 0.2 0.1 1.8 1.9 2.0 1.8
Durg 2.2 0.6 5.1 0.3 0.4 0.1 0.9 0.5 1.8
Janjgir-Champa 3.8 3.2 9.5 0.7 0.8 0.1 1.2 1.2 0.4
Jashpur 1.5 1.3 - 0.5 0.3 - 1.9 1.8 -
Kanker 1.8 1.8 - 0.3 0.2 - 1.0 1.0 -
Kawardha 3.9 2.9 - 0.0 0.0 - 12.7 10.8 -
Korba 4.5 1.8 8.3 0.5 0.9 0.0 4.4 3.3 6.0
Koriya 1.1 1.1 1.2 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.9 1.0 0.5
Mahasamund 2.0 1.7 5.1 1.8 1.6 3.2 4.2 4.2 4.2
Raigarh 1.5 0.1 11.0 0.2 0.3 0.0 1.1 1.1 1.7
Raipur 2.8 0.8 7.5 0.6 0.8 0.0 1.3 1.0 2.3
Rajnandgaon 3.7 2.8 9.1 1.0 1.2 0.0 0.5 0.1 2.9
Surguja 5.9 5.9 6.3 0.4 0.2 2.4 2.3 2.2 3.9

Current Usage
State / District Periodic Abstinence (%) Withdrawal (%) LAM (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.5 0.5 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.7
Bastar 0.1 0.2 0.0 0.6 0.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Bilaspur 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 0.5 1.8 0.2 0.1 0.3
Dantewada 0.5 0.4 1.4 0.4 0.4 0.1 0.3 0.3 0.3
Dhamtari 0.3 0.3 0.5 0.8 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.1 0.4
Durg 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 0.3 0.3 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.6 0.7 0.1
Jashpur 0.5 0.5 - 0.5 0.4 - 0.7 0.8 -
Kanker 0.0 0.0 - 0.6 0.6 - 0.3 0.3 -
Kawardha 0.0 0.0 - 0.0 0.0 - 9.4 10.2 -
Korba 0.8 0.3 1.5 1.2 0.3 2.4 2.3 2.6 1.9
Koriya 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.0
Mahasamund 1.2 1.2 1.1 0.4 0.4 0.6 1.4 1.4 2.1
Raigarh 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.6
Raipur 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.0 0.3 0.2 0.5
Rajnandgaon 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.4 0.2 0.0 1.4
Surguja 0.0 0.0 0.4 1.7 1.7 0.9 0.6 0.4 2.4

43
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

44
Chhattisgarh: Current Usage of Family Planning Practices (CMW aged 15-49 years) (%)
CHHATTISGARH

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

Any Method Any Modern Method Any Traditional Method Female Sterilization
CHHATTISGARH

UNMET NEED FOR FAMILY PLANNING


Unmet need for Spacing (%) Unmet need for Limiting (%) Total Unmet need (%)
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Chhattisgarh 14.2 13.8 15.8 10.2 10.3 10.1 24.4 24.1 25.9

Bastar 8.6 8.3 11.7 3.7 2.8 13.6 12.3 11.1 25.3

Bilaspur 17.1 16.7 18.1 12.5 11.0 15.6 29.7 27.7 33.6

Dantewada 13.7 14.1 10.8 17.2 17.4 15.6 30.9 31.5 26.4

Dhamtari 13.0 13.3 10.4 8.2 8.2 8.0 21.2 21.5 18.4

Durg 12.3 12.0 12.9 9.7 9.9 9.2 22.0 22.0 22.2

Janjgir-Champa 18.0 15.7 37.0 7.0 7.1 6.5 25.0 22.8 43.5

Jashpur 18.2 18.4 - 13.2 13.3 - 31.4 31.7 -

Kanker 12.1 12.4 - 12.7 12.6 - 24.8 25.0 -

Kawardha 14.9 16.0 - 3.3 3.1 - 18.2 19.1 -

Korba 12.0 12.7 11.0 7.1 9.1 4.1 19.0 21.8 15.1

Koriya 20.4 19.5 23.1 12.2 11.8 13.4 32.6 31.2 36.5

Mahasamund 14.7 15.0 11.6 8.9 9.0 7.7 23.6 24.1 19.3

Raigarh 12.1 12.2 11.5 10.3 9.5 15.5 22.4 21.8 27.0

Raipur 18.5 18.6 18.4 8.3 9.0 6.7 26.8 27.5 25.1

Rajnandgaon 13.2 11.1 23.5 15.5 15.1 17.7 28.7 26.2 41.2

Surguja 11.5 11.5 12.3 15.1 15.6 8.3 26.6 27.1 20.7

Annual Health Survey 2012-13

45
CHHATTISGARH

ANTE NATAL CARE


Currently Married
Mothers who had Antenatal
Pregnant Women aged Mothers who received any
Check-up in First Trimester
State / District 15-49 years registered Antenatal Check-up (%)
(%)
for ANC (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 83.9 83.1 86.0 91.8 91.5 93.2 73.6 72.1 80.9
Bastar 79.1 79.7 73.7 89.2 89.3 89.0 82.1 81.9 84.4
Bilaspur 78.3 78.0 78.5 91.3 92.6 87.9 66.8 66.7 67.1
Dantewada 84.4 83.7 88.1 89.2 89.2 89.5 45.2 39.5 81.7
Dhamtari 89.6 89.6 89.8 97.8 97.8 98.3 85.0 84.6 88.3
Durg 86.6 87.1 85.7 93.5 92.2 96.3 84.8 82.0 90.5
Janjgir-Champa 75.7 75.1 78.8 96.6 96.6 96.6 83.7 83.5 85.8
Jashpur 80.2 79.6 - 92.6 92.6 - 61.8 61.5 -
Kanker 81.3 81.7 - 93.0 92.7 - 83.4 82.9 -
Kawardha 77.6 77.1 - 90.6 89.8 - 60.1 56.2 -
Korba 73.0 66.3 83.5 90.3 87.2 96.2 62.1 52.1 81.6
Koriya 75.7 73.7 84.8 87.5 85.3 96.3 75.0 73.9 79.3
Mahasamund 88.3 88.9 73.1 93.1 92.5 98.7 70.3 68.4 88.6
Raigarh 90.7 91.2 85.2 90.7 89.9 96.8 81.0 79.3 93.3
Raipur 92.5 91.1 94.6 91.3 91.0 92.2 73.2 72.7 74.7
Rajnandgaon 85.7 83.6 90.2 92.3 94.3 80.0 75.5 76.2 71.5
Surguja 67.1 65.1 100.0 90.1 89.6 98.1 69.4 68.0 91.7

Chhattisgarh: Antenatal Care (%)

100
90
80
70
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

60
50
40
30
20
10
0

Currently Married Pregnant Women aged 15-49 years registered for ANC Mothers who received any Antenatal Check-up Mothers who had Antenatal Check-up in First Trimester

46
CHHATTISGARH

ANTE NATAL CARE


Mothers who received 3 Mothers who received at Mothers who consumed
or more Antenatal Care least one Tetanus Toxoid IFA for 100 days or more
State / District
(%) (TT) injection(%) (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 65.9 62.8 79.9 90.8 90.4 92.5 28.1 27.4 31.6
Bastar 69.4 68.8 76.0 88.7 88.6 89.0 26.7 26.1 33.5
Bilaspur 66.4 65.8 68.0 90.5 91.8 86.7 20.4 21.1 18.6
Dantewada 68.5 66.0 84.8 88.8 88.8 88.8 32.4 33.0 28.6
Dhamtari 81.2 81.9 75.6 97.7 97.7 98.1 52.2 51.6 56.8
Durg 78.7 74.3 87.6 93.4 92.2 96.1 37.1 36.8 37.8
Janjgir-Champa 54.0 51.0 85.4 95.8 96.3 90.2 20.2 19.5 27.5
Jashpur 48.3 47.7 - 92.3 92.3 - 22.5 21.9 -
Kanker 76.5 75.8 - 92.8 92.6 - 39.3 39.2 -
Kawardha 61.7 59.2 - 90.2 89.6 - 21.5 17.7 -
Korba 60.9 49.6 82.9 89.8 86.5 96.1 18.3 13.7 27.1
Koriya 52.3 48.5 68.0 86.6 84.2 96.3 26.8 24.9 34.6
Mahasamund 76.6 75.9 83.0 92.2 91.5 98.7 32.9 32.3 38.4
Raigarh 71.6 69.3 87.7 90.7 89.8 96.8 34.2 33.4 40.3
Raipur 70.6 67.7 79.2 91.1 90.9 91.6 20.0 18.5 24.3
Rajnandgaon 69.7 69.3 72.8 92.2 94.2 80.0 32.4 31.1 40.6
Surguja 43.1 40.6 83.0 83.8 83.0 98.1 31.7 30.6 50.0

Mothers who had Full Mothers who received ANC Mothers whose Blood
State / District Antenatal Check-up (%) from Govt. Source (%) Pressure (BP) taken (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 22.5 21.2 28.5 42.8 43.1 41.3 78.7 76.6 88.2
Bastar 23.4 22.6 31.9 49.7 48.8 60.3 85.3 85.3 84.4
Bilaspur 15.0 14.7 16.0 38.7 38.8 38.5 73.7 72.5 76.9
Dantewada 24.9 24.7 26.2 49.4 51.0 39.1 84.0 83.1 89.5
Dhamtari 47.4 47.3 48.4 52.1 52.6 47.5 91.9 91.2 97.6
Durg 34.1 33.4 35.5 41.8 46.0 33.7 88.4 85.7 94.0
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 14.9 14.1 23.7 47.6 47.9 45.3 87.5 86.7 95.3
Jashpur 14.2 13.4 - 44.0 44.2 - 71.8 71.2 -
Kanker 35.9 35.7 - 43.6 43.1 - 90.2 90.0 -
Kawardha 18.3 15.1 - 43.1 44.6 - 64.0 60.6 -
Korba 14.8 9.5 25.1 43.0 41.3 45.9 70.0 59.7 90.0
Koriya 21.5 19.5 29.6 55.4 54.7 57.8 75.5 70.7 94.8
Mahasamund 30.5 30.0 35.4 52.3 51.4 61.1 85.7 85.1 91.7
Raigarh 28.2 27.1 36.5 44.4 42.7 55.7 83.1 81.3 95.2
Raipur 15.8 14.1 20.9 41.7 43.1 37.7 75.8 72.6 85.4
Rajnandgaon 24.4 22.3 38.1 41.3 41.5 39.3 86.8 88.0 79.2
Surguja 18.6 17.1 43.7 29.8 28.0 55.9 60.3 58.0 97.1

47
CHHATTISGARH

ANTE NATAL CARE


Mothers whose Blood taken for Hb (%) Mothers who underwent Ultrasound (%)
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 57.3 52.6 78.9 32.9 27.7 56.6
Bastar 68.0 66.6 82.9 51.7 50.1 69.2
Bilaspur 46.7 42.6 58.4 28.8 22.5 46.5
Dantewada 49.7 44.1 85.6 36.8 32.4 65.0
Dhamtari 76.7 74.4 95.0 33.2 30.8 52.3
Durg 69.2 59.3 89.5 40.5 27.6 67.0
Janjgir-Champa 70.3 68.4 90.5 26.5 24.4 48.1
Jashpur 34.8 34.7 - 19.9 19.0 -
Kanker 76.9 76.2 - 48.9 48.6 -
Kawardha 35.9 32.8 - 15.2 13.6 -
Korba 49.7 36.3 75.5 28.8 20.1 45.6
Koriya 59.9 55.9 76.1 38.9 34.0 58.9
Mahasamund 66.5 64.8 82.1 31.8 30.3 45.4
Raigarh 59.5 56.0 84.1 41.8 38.0 68.5
Raipur 59.6 52.2 81.6 32.8 24.8 56.5
Rajnandgaon 67.1 65.8 75.5 28.9 23.9 60.1
Surguja 34.1 31.2 81.1 24.2 21.8 62.6

Chhattisgarh: Mothers who received Full Antenatal Check - up (%)

100
90
80
70
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

60
50
40
30
20
10
0

3 or more Antenatal Care At least one Tetanus Toxoid (TT) injection IFA for 100 days or more Full Antenatal Check-up

48
Chhattisgarh: Mothers who received tests during Ante Natal Check-up (%)

100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

Blood Test for Hb Ultrasound Blood Pressure


CHHATTISGARH

49
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

DELIVERY CARE
Delivery at Government Delivery at Private
Institutional Delivery (%)
State / District Institution (%) Institution (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 39.5 35.4 58.4 29.2 29.2 29.5 9.9 5.9 28.3
Bastar 67.1 66.4 74.9 60.5 61.0 54.8 6.5 5.3 19.8
Bilaspur 28.2 24.1 39.8 20.2 18.5 25.2 7.7 5.4 14.3
Dantewada 49.7 46.2 72.1 37.7 39.6 25.4 11.6 6.4 45.7
Dhamtari 52.2 50.4 66.5 38.7 39.2 34.6 11.6 9.5 28.5
Durg 39.9 31.1 57.9 22.9 25.1 18.5 16.6 5.8 38.9
Janjgir-Champa 27.1 25.7 41.7 20.9 19.9 31.2 5.7 5.2 10.5
Jashpur 37.8 37.0 - 30.7 30.3 - 6.8 6.4 -
Kanker 68.4 67.5 - 60.3 60.4 - 7.7 6.7 -
Kawardha 23.8 22.6 - 19.8 19.3 - 3.9 3.2 -
Korba 42.6 33.9 59.5 28.6 28.5 28.9 13.0 4.7 28.9
Koriya 40.1 34.1 64.6 31.4 29.4 39.3 8.5 4.6 24.3
Mahasamund 49.5 47.6 67.7 37.7 38.3 31.4 11.6 9.1 35.4
Raigarh 42.2 37.3 77.2 33.2 30.8 49.8 8.4 5.8 26.2
Raipur 34.5 26.0 59.8 22.0 19.5 29.1 12.2 6.0 30.6
Rajnandgaon 43.5 38.9 72.8 32.6 31.0 42.6 10.8 7.7 30.2
Surguja 32.0 29.2 76.7 25.7 24.1 51.9 6.0 4.8 24.8

Chhattisgarh: Institutional Delivery (%)


70

60

50
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

40

30

20

10

Government Private

50
CHHATTISGARH

DELIVERY CARE
Delivery at home conducted by
Delivery at Home (%) Safe Delivery (%)
State / District skilled health personnel (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 59.4 63.7 39.6 50.5 49.5 57.9 59.1 55.4 75.8
Bastar 32.8 33.5 24.7 51.0 51.6 41.5 79.3 79.3 79.5
Bilaspur 69.4 75.8 51.5 63.7 63.4 64.8 44.9 37.1 67.0
Dantewada 50.2 53.7 27.9 25.3 23.1 52.6 56.7 52.8 81.4
Dhamtari 47.7 49.5 33.3 64.5 66.2 43.5 76.8 76.6 78.0
Durg 55.4 61.9 42.0 57.8 54.9 66.7 62.6 54.5 79.2
Janjgir-Champa 72.7 74.2 57.3 63.5 64.0 56.8 47.3 45.9 62.0
Jashpur 62.1 63.0 - 36.5 36.1 - 52.4 51.5 -
Kanker 31.6 32.5 - 57.9 58.1 - 80.9 80.3 -
Kawardha 75.9 77.1 - 82.4 82.2 - 66.8 65.9 -
Korba 55.4 66.1 34.9 40.7 34.6 62.9 57.8 48.7 75.4
Koriya 59.8 65.9 35.0 39.6 39.5 41.0 58.3 54.6 73.3
Mahasamund 50.4 52.3 31.9 51.5 50.4 68.5 65.4 63.7 82.5
Raigarh 57.5 62.4 22.6 46.6 45.7 64.9 65.0 61.4 90.3
Raipur 65.4 73.9 40.1 50.7 51.8 44.8 62.8 59.0 74.3
Rajnandgaon 56.4 61.1 26.7 48.0 48.9 34.3 61.8 59.2 78.5
Surguja 67.8 70.5 23.3 24.9 25.0 20.8 42.8 40.5 81.1

90
Chhattisgarh: Safe Delivery (%)

80

70

60

50
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

40

30

20

10

51
CHHATTISGARH

DELIVERY CARE
Caesarean out of total delivery taken Caesarean out of total delivery taken
State / District place in Government Institutions (%) place in Private Institutions (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 9.0 8.2 12.9 37.6 39.1 36.1
Bastar 4.1 4.0 4.9 29.2 30.0 26.9
Bilaspur 10.5 9.4 12.9 65.9 76.4 54.8
Dantewada 7.2 7.0 9.6 21.9 17.1 26.2
Dhamtari 5.1 4.8 7.5 46.0 45.4 47.7
Durg 14.6 13.6 17.5 35.8 41.7 34.0
Janjgir-Champa 11.3 11.7 8.7 32.1 32.6 29.0
Jashpur 13.6 13.5 - 27.6 27.2 -
Kanker 5.2 5.3 - 39.9 38.3 -
Kawardha 3.6 3.6 - 59.7 59.6 -
Korba 10.6 10.1 11.5 28.5 29.4 28.2
Koriya 12.7 10.1 20.4 34.5 40.0 30.4
Mahasamund 8.1 8.2 6.9 37.9 39.8 33.3
Raigarh 9.9 8.9 13.9 36.5 37.6 34.8
Raipur 11.1 9.3 14.8 36.1 34.4 37.1
Rajnandgaon 7.8 6.8 12.8 43.6 40.7 48.4
Surguja 7.4 7.1 9.3 26.1 26.9 23.5

Chhattisgarh: Caesarean out of total delivery taken place in Government/Private Institutions (%)

70

60

50
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

40

30

20

10

Government Private

52
CHHATTISGARH

POST NATAL CARE


Less than 24 hrs stay in Mothers who received Post- Mothers who received
institution after delivery natal Check-up within 48 Post-natal Check-up within
State / District
(%) hrs. of delivery (%) 1 week of delivery (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 37.9 40.1 31.6 70.3 66.9 85.8 75.3 72.3 89.4
Bastar 23.1 24.5 9.6 77.2 76.3 87.8 84.1 83.6 90.1
Bilaspur 35.4 35.9 34.5 62.8 57.8 76.8 69.3 65.5 79.8
Dantewada 36.2 41.0 15.9 66.6 63.0 89.7 69.5 66.0 92.2
Dhamtari 50.7 54.1 29.9 86.3 86.3 86.6 91.0 91.1 90.7
Durg 36.5 40.7 31.9 85.2 83.3 89.1 91.3 89.4 95.2
Janjgir-Champa 32.8 35.3 17.1 67.9 66.0 88.1 72.4 70.6 91.2
Jashpur 37.0 37.5 - 48.9 48.2 - 54.1 53.4 -
Kanker 32.0 32.3 - 85.9 85.4 - 92.6 92.4 -
Kawardha 65.5 71.9 - 78.4 79.4 - 83.5 84.5 -
Korba 39.3 41.8 36.7 61.2 48.3 86.2 64.2 51.7 88.2
Koriya 25.6 23.8 29.3 60.2 54.0 85.4 64.1 58.2 88.0
Mahasamund 46.7 48.2 36.1 84.8 84.4 88.6 88.4 88.2 90.8
Raigarh 28.5 30.8 20.6 64.2 60.8 88.9 69.4 66.4 90.9
Raipur 42.3 44.8 39.0 72.4 67.8 86.1 77.6 73.5 89.6
Rajnandgaon 51.7 57.0 34.0 85.1 83.8 93.3 89.8 88.9 95.3
Surguja 38.9 41.8 21.5 45.6 43.1 85.9 49.7 47.3 88.3

Mothers who did not receive any Post- New borns who were checked up within
State / District natal Check up (%) 24 hrs. of birth (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 22.0 24.9 9.1 65.9 62.3 82.0
Bastar 11.8 12.2 7.6 77.8 76.4 93.1
Bilaspur 28.1 31.5 18.5 58.1 52.8 72.9
Dantewada 29.8 33.3 7.1 61.2 58.0 82.2
Dhamtari 6.7 6.6 7.6 86.9 86.4 90.8
Durg 7.3 9.0 4.0 83.8 82.8 85.8
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 21.3 22.9 4.1 51.1 49.7 65.1


Jashpur 41.0 41.6 - 45.4 44.8 -
Kanker 5.3 5.4 - 83.8 83.4 -
Kawardha 13.9 13.1 - 74.5 73.9 -
Korba 33.3 45.5 9.6 53.5 41.3 77.0
Koriya 32.7 38.2 10.4 58.8 52.8 83.3
Mahasamund 9.7 9.9 7.9 81.7 81.5 83.7
Raigarh 28.5 31.2 8.7 59.9 56.3 85.7
Raipur 20.5 24.4 8.8 66.2 60.2 83.9
Rajnandgaon 8.0 8.7 3.7 83.5 82.2 91.5
Surguja 47.0 49.3 10.7 41.5 38.9 82.4

53
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

54
Chhattisgarh: Mothers by status of receipt of Post-natal Check-up (%)
100
CHHATTISGARH

90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

Did not receive Check up within 48 hrs.


CHHATTISGARH

JANANI SURAKSHA YOJANA (JSY)


Mothers who availed Mothers who availed
Mothers who availed
financial assistance for financial assistance for
financial assistance for
State / District institutional delivery under Government Institutional
delivery under JSY (%)
JSY (%) delivery under JSY (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 34.0 32.9 39.0 75.1 80.5 60.0 85.1 87.3 75.4
Bastar 67.3 67.6 63.9 96.3 97.6 83.2 98.5 99.1 91.0
Bilaspur 26.3 22.2 38.0 72.0 76.7 63.9 81.1 81.5 80.3
Dantewada 44.4 44.5 43.8 84.7 91.6 56.0 92.7 94.7 72.1
Dhamtari 46.7 46.1 51.8 85.1 86.7 75.0 96.5 96.9 93.1
Durg 33.1 33.6 32.2 63.3 73.5 52.0 79.9 81.8 74.6
Janjgir-Champa 21.4 20.9 26.4 66.5 67.7 58.5 75.8 76.9 68.5
Jashpur 34.2 33.8 - 82.4 83.4 - 83.5 83.3 -
Kanker 63.1 63.3 - 89.5 90.9 - 95.9 96.2 -
Kawardha 25.3 25.6 - 78.9 81.5 - 89.1 89.5 -
Korba 35.2 29.5 46.2 72.0 78.1 65.3 82.5 84.5 78.5
Koriya 36.4 37.0 33.7 71.6 81.7 49.8 79.3 87.7 53.6
Mahasamund 40.1 39.9 42.4 75.6 78.0 59.5 85.6 86.3 77.8
Raigarh 33.1 30.3 53.0 73.8 75.6 67.9 82.9 83.7 79.7
Raipur 25.9 21.9 37.6 65.7 69.8 60.4 78.0 79.9 74.4
Rajnandgaon 38.6 37.2 48.0 78.8 83.3 63.6 88.1 90.8 75.6
Surguja 26.5 25.8 38.3 70.6 74.2 48.7 77.6 80.9 52.3

Chhattisgarh: Mothers who availed financial assistance for delivery under JSY (%)

100
90
80
70
60
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

50
40
30
20
10
0

Any delivery Institutional delivery Government Institutional delivery

55
CHHATTISGARH

IMMUNIZATION, VITAMIN A & IRON SUPPLEMENT AND BIRTH WEIGHT


Children aged 12- Children aged 12-23 months
Children aged 12-23 months
23 months having who have received 3 doses
State / District who have received BCG (%)
Immunization Card (%) of Polio vaccine(%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 89.2 87.9 95.3 96.6 96.4 97.3 83.3 82.5 87.3
Bastar 89.1 88.4 98.4 96.0 95.8 97.8 90.8 90.7 91.3
Bilaspur 86.4 85.8 88.4 96.4 97.0 94.5 87.9 90.0 81.5
Dantewada 85.3 83.9 94.5 92.4 91.9 95.8 78.7 77.9 84.0
Dhamtari 92.7 92.7 93.2 97.8 97.8 97.6 93.5 93.4 95.0
Durg 97.0 96.4 98.2 97.3 96.8 98.2 90.5 88.4 95.0
Janjgir-Champa 94.2 94.1 95.0 97.1 97.1 97.5 82.1 83.6 64.0
Jashpur 90.1 89.9 - 97.3 97.3 - 68.2 68.4 -
Kanker 95.5 95.3 - 97.6 97.6 - 93.0 93.0 -
Kawardha 85.2 83.2 - 96.4 96.3 - 79.7 78.9 -
Korba 89.7 85.9 97.6 97.0 96.1 99.0 70.7 68.5 75.4
Koriya 90.8 88.9 98.2 96.9 97.0 96.7 96.5 96.9 95.2
Mahasamund 95.5 95.3 97.2 97.3 97.2 97.9 92.3 91.8 96.6
Raigarh 84.9 83.5 94.5 96.6 96.5 97.9 78.5 77.5 85.8
Raipur 83.7 78.6 95.7 96.6 96.4 97.0 86.3 85.4 88.3
Rajnandgaon 90.3 90.9 87.1 96.0 95.8 96.8 88.5 88.8 86.7
Surguja 83.7 82.7 100.0 96.2 96.0 100.0 68.8 67.4 93.3

Children aged 12-23


Children aged 12-23 months Children aged 12-23
months who have
who have received Measles months Fully Immunized
State / District received 3 doses of DPT
vaccine (%) (%)
vaccine (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 81.8 81.0 85.7 90.0 89.7 91.4 74.9 73.9 79.4
Bastar 89.7 89.5 91.8 87.7 87.3 92.3 82.5 82.1 88.0
Bilaspur 77.3 78.0 75.3 85.8 86.3 84.0 68.9 70.5 64.1
Dantewada 76.6 75.6 83.1 83.4 81.8 94.1 66.0 63.8 80.5
Dhamtari 95.8 95.8 95.6 93.1 92.9 94.4 88.9 88.6 91.4
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 91.2 89.2 95.2 93.0 93.1 92.6 86.8 85.0 90.4
Janjgir-Champa 89.7 90.0 85.7 91.9 91.7 94.4 75.7 77.1 58.4
Jashpur 80.2 80.7 - 88.4 88.6 - 61.4 61.7 -
Kanker 92.6 92.4 - 95.1 94.9 - 90.0 90.0 -
Kawardha 81.6 80.0 - 88.4 88.0 - 71.8 69.8 -
Korba 69.0 66.7 73.7 90.6 88.0 96.0 63.1 60.0 69.6
Koriya 79.3 79.9 77.4 90.9 91.3 89.5 76.0 76.8 73.2
Mahasamund 86.3 86.1 89.0 90.8 90.2 96.6 81.8 81.2 87.6
Raigarh 80.3 79.8 83.4 92.0 92.4 88.7 72.9 72.4 76.6
Raipur 85.4 84.7 87.0 92.9 93.1 92.5 80.3 79.4 82.3
Rajnandgaon 87.3 87.9 83.9 92.4 92.4 92.3 83.0 83.6 79.4
Surguja 65.3 63.8 90.9 86.5 86.4 89.0 59.1 57.8 82.3

56
Chhattisgarh: Children aged 12-23 months having Immunization Card vs. Fully Immunized (%)

100

80

60

40

20

Having Immunization Card Children Fully Immunized


CHHATTISGARH

57
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

IMMUNIZATION, VITAMIN A & IRON SUPPLEMENT AND BIRTH WEIGHT


Children (aged 6-35
Children who have
Children who did not months) who received at
received Polio dose at
State / District receive any vaccination (%) least one Vitamin A dose
birth (%)
during last six months (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 87.8 86.7 92.7 2.9 3.1 2.3 68.3 67.3 73.4
Bastar 92.5 92.4 93.4 3.3 3.4 1.6 68.4 68.0 73.8
Bilaspur 89.2 89.2 89.1 2.9 2.5 4.0 62.1 61.2 64.5
Dantewada 84.8 83.2 94.8 6.5 6.9 3.9 65.9 65.6 68.1
Dhamtari 96.9 97.0 96.5 2.2 2.1 2.4 73.1 73.4 70.5
Durg 92.5 91.8 93.9 2.5 2.9 1.8 68.8 67.4 71.5
Janjgir-Champa 90.8 90.6 93.2 2.1 2.2 1.2 67.3 67.1 69.6
Jashpur 87.2 87.2 - 2.1 2.2 - 66.0 66.5 -
Kanker 92.2 92.0 - 2.1 2.2 - 78.8 78.7 -
Kawardha 95.4 95.9 - 3.2 3.3 - 56.9 58.7 -
Korba 88.7 84.3 97.8 2.5 3.3 0.8 72.7 68.2 81.9
Koriya 77.4 75.1 86.1 2.6 2.5 2.7 61.7 60.6 65.7
Mahasamund 83.0 82.4 89.0 2.7 2.8 2.1 58.4 56.6 76.6
Raigarh 90.5 89.8 95.8 3.0 3.1 1.8 65.4 64.5 72.1
Raipur 89.9 89.8 90.2 3.0 3.1 3.0 72.8 69.0 81.8
Rajnandgaon 87.9 87.6 89.9 2.8 2.7 3.2 73.6 72.2 82.3
Surguja 74.9 73.6 98.2 3.6 3.8 0.0 71.3 70.9 78.7

Children (aged 6-35


months) who received Children whose birth weight Children with birth weight
State / District IFA tablets/syrup during was taken (%) less than 2.5 Kg. (%)
last 3 months (%))
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 42.7 43.6 38.7 67.9 65.4 79.9 13.2 13.0 14.2
Bastar 65.8 65.5 70.5 81.8 81.2 90.3 5.4 5.0 10.3
Bilaspur 46.9 48.4 42.7 55.7 51.2 69.0 13.8 15.2 9.2
Dantewada 43.5 41.6 55.7 57.2 53.8 87.4 18.6 19.0 15.5
Dhamtari 41.0 41.1 39.8 91.3 91.8 87.6 16.0 16.1 15.1
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 40.3 45.0 30.9 85.1 85.6 84.1 12.0 10.9 13.9
Janjgir-Champa 43.8 42.9 54.7 60.4 59.0 75.8 12.8 13.6 6.6
Jashpur 45.1 44.8 - 71.7 71.2 - 16.3 16.3 -
Kanker 73.7 73.7 - 94.0 93.8 - 7.2 7.1 -
Kawardha 29.9 32.8 - 69.8 70.0 - 7.6 7.4 -
Korba 45.7 41.6 54.0 58.6 46.5 81.7 14.9 16.0 13.5
Koriya 48.8 47.1 55.1 60.3 56.9 74.2 17.7 19.0 14.2
Mahasamund 48.6 50.0 34.5 70.8 71.0 68.7 11.2 10.7 16.3
Raigarh 41.8 41.0 47.1 62.9 59.4 87.5 8.6 7.8 12.6
Raipur 33.0 35.6 26.9 67.9 64.2 79.1 17.3 16.5 19.5
Rajnandgaon 40.8 42.2 32.7 84.8 84.4 87.1 14.7 14.9 13.0
Surguja 30.5 30.6 30.5 39.0 36.9 75.7 14.9 14.3 21.4

58
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Children with birth weight less than 2.5 Kg. (%)

18

16

14

12

10

0
Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh: Children with birth weight less than 2.5 Kg. (%)
.
25

20

15
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

10

59
CHHATTISGARH

CHILDHOOD DISEASES
Children suffering from Children suffering from
Children suffering from
Diarrhoea who received Acute Respiratory Infection
State / District Diarrhoea (%)
HAF/ORS/ORT & Zinc (%) (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 12.2 12.6 10.0 93.7 94.2 90.4 15.5 15.3 17.0
Bastar 25.4 26.5 6.9 99.0 99.0 100.0 20.8 20.5 26.2
Bilaspur 14.9 18.6 5.3 99.2 99.1 100.0 20.8 22.0 17.6
Dantewada 18.4 18.0 22.7 95.2 94.6 100.0 6.5 6.3 8.8
Dhamtari 11.3 12.0 5.4 81.3 81.7 72.7 33.9 35.8 17.7
Durg 8.4 7.5 10.6 89.4 92.1 84.7 12.4 11.2 15.4
Janjgir-Champa 9.9 10.5 1.0 96.4 96.3 100.0 17.6 18.4 7.2
Jashpur 9.2 9.3 - 91.6 91.5 - 12.4 12.3 -
Kanker 3.8 3.9 - 83.4 83.4 - 11.5 11.7 -
Kawardha 33.8 33.2 - 97.5 97.0 - 26.3 26.3 -
Korba 13.7 14.8 11.5 90.7 95.8 77.8 18.9 16.8 23.2
Koriya 12.6 9.8 23.1 92.9 93.8 91.5 12.8 10.5 21.2
Mahasamund 6.9 6.7 8.7 91.8 90.7 100.0 14.1 13.6 18.5
Raigarh 7.9 8.1 6.1 96.7 96.4 100.0 19.0 18.7 20.7
Raipur 8.1 7.8 9.2 81.6 80.2 85.7 8.4 6.3 16.1
Rajnandgaon 15.3 16.3 8.2 88.7 87.9 100.0 9.4 9.3 10.1
Surguja 2.3 2.2 3.6 94.6 94.1 100.0 15.7 16.0 9.6

Children suffering from


Children suffering
Acute Respiratory Children suffering from
from Fever who sought
State / District Infection who sought Fever (%)
treatment (%)
treatment (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 97.9 97.9 98.4 16.3 16.0 17.7 95.2 95.1 95.5
Bastar 96.8 96.6 100.0 30.6 31.3 20.0 96.5 96.7 92.3
Bilaspur 99.8 99.7 100.0 19.5 18.7 21.6 96.4 96.7 95.8
Dantewada 98.8 98.6 100.0 21.6 21.6 21.3 92.8 92.6 95.7
Dhamtari 100.0 100.0 100.0 22.5 23.2 17.2 96.5 96.2 100.0
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Durg 93.2 90.4 98.1 9.2 8.6 10.7 94.8 92.9 98.6
Janjgir-Champa 98.5 98.5 100.0 13.9 14.6 3.1 95.5 95.4 100.0
Jashpur 98.5 98.5 - 5.0 4.8 - 100.0 100.0 -
Kanker 100.0 100.0 - 11.7 12.2 - 100.0 100.0 -
Kawardha 99.7 99.7 - 17.9 16.5 - 90.5 89.1 -
Korba 99.0 98.2 100.0 19.0 17.0 22.9 95.1 95.2 95.0
Koriya 94.8 92.0 100.0 21.4 17.3 36.9 94.9 93.2 97.9
Mahasamund 95.1 94.4 100.0 13.3 8.0 66.3 92.3 85.9 100.0
Raigarh 99.6 99.5 100.0 10.2 10.6 7.0 93.4 94.5 80.0
Raipur 97.9 100.0 95.1 17.2 17.3 16.8 95.4 95.9 93.8
Rajnandgaon 95.8 98.0 81.3 15.8 17.1 7.0 91.1 92.1 72.7
Surguja 99.2 99.2 100.0 11.1 11.3 8.4 97.9 98.4 85.7

60
Chhattisgarh: Childhood Diseases (%)
40

35

30

25

20

15

10

Diarrhoea Acute Respiratory Infection Fever


CHHATTISGARH

61
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

BREASTFEEDING AND SUPPLEMENTATION


Children breastfed within one hour of Children (aged 6-35 months) exclusively
State / District birth (%) breastfed for at least six months (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 66.3 65.6 69.6 50.8 52.3 43.8
Bastar 92.5 92.7 89.3 73.2 73.7 66.3
Bilaspur 53.5 52.1 57.8 42.0 40.7 45.9
Dantewada 83.6 83.9 81.3 70.6 68.4 90.3
Dhamtari 80.3 80.4 79.5 52.6 53.5 45.7
Durg 83.5 86.7 77.0 47.0 50.1 40.8
Janjgir-Champa 48.1 46.9 60.5 53.1 55.3 29.1
Jashpur 50.3 50.3 - 49.8 49.7 -
Kanker 81.8 82.5 - 71.1 72.7 -
Kawardha 74.5 74.5 - 30.6 31.1 -
Korba 54.2 47.3 67.1 43.0 40.6 47.4
Koriya 57.5 55.9 64.1 34.8 34.5 36.2
Mahasamund 68.7 68.3 72.4 54.0 55.1 43.6
Raigarh 47.3 45.1 62.2 46.9 47.6 41.5
Raipur 69.3 68.4 72.2 52.4 56.1 40.9
Rajnandgaon 64.9 65.3 61.9 44.3 46.2 31.6
Surguja 51.1 50.4 64.4 48.2 48.2 49.8

Chhattisgarh: Children breastfed within one hour of birth (%)


100
90
80
70
60
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

50
40
30
20
10
0

62
Chhattisgarh: Children (aged 6-35 months) exclusively breastfed for at least six months (%)

100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
CHHATTISGARH

63
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

CHILDREN WHO RECEIVED FOODS OTHER THAN BREAST MILK DURING FIRST 6 MONTHS
Water (%) Animal/Formula Milk (%) Semi-Solid mashed food (%)
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 44.5 43.1 51.4 44.0 42.4 52.2 7.7 7.3 9.5
Bastar 19.0 18.4 27.7 21.7 21.1 29.3 3.9 4.1 1.7
Bilaspur 52.7 54.8 46.6 47.6 46.0 52.4 3.6 3.5 4.2
Dantewada 26.6 28.8 7.3 33.4 34.3 25.0 4.3 4.4 3.6
Dhamtari 28.3 27.9 31.7 45.5 44.9 50.2 6.5 6.5 6.0
Durg 51.9 49.1 57.6 52.0 49.7 56.6 9.4 8.1 12.2
Janjgir-Champa 43.2 41.5 61.5 38.7 36.8 58.9 6.2 4.7 22.9
Jashpur 47.9 48.0 - 39.7 39.5 - 8.9 9.1 -
Kanker 16.9 16.7 - 31.0 29.8 - 4.3 4.4 -
Kawardha 69.0 68.9 - 58.0 59.3 - 9.9 10.9 -
Korba 55.7 57.7 51.8 47.6 48.9 45.3 12.4 13.1 11.0
Koriya 62.2 61.8 63.6 46.2 46.2 46.2 13.4 15.2 6.2
Mahasamund 24.3 24.3 24.3 47.2 46.2 56.8 7.5 6.5 16.9
Raigarh 50.7 49.7 57.1 43.7 43.0 48.4 10.3 10.1 11.4
Raipur 44.8 41.1 56.6 48.9 46.0 58.0 7.0 6.2 9.4
Rajnandgaon 52.7 51.0 64.0 55.6 53.6 69.3 10.4 10.2 12.0
Surguja 48.7 49.0 43.1 39.4 39.7 33.2 8.6 8.7 6.9

Solid (Adult) Food (%) Vegetables/Fruits (%)


State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 5.4 5.0 7.3 5.3 4.9 7.5
Bastar 3.0 3.2 1.3 3.0 3.1 1.7
Bilaspur 2.0 1.9 2.2 1.8 1.8 1.7
Dantewada 2.7 2.7 2.8 2.4 2.4 2.4
Dhamtari 4.1 4.3 2.6 4.2 3.9 6.4
Durg 7.0 5.8 9.5 7.2 5.6 10.5
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 4.0 2.5 19.4 3.8 2.3 20.4


Jashpur 4.5 4.6 - 5.4 5.6 -
Kanker 3.2 3.3 - 2.8 2.9 -
Kawardha 5.4 5.8 - 4.7 5.2 -
Korba 10.6 11.9 8.3 7.9 8.0 7.8
Koriya 5.5 6.0 3.5 6.9 6.4 8.7
Mahasamund 5.4 4.6 12.8 5.0 4.4 10.7
Raigarh 7.9 7.5 10.3 9.2 9.3 9.0
Raipur 5.3 4.2 9.0 5.2 4.1 8.6
Rajnandgaon 6.7 6.7 7.2 6.9 6.9 7.2
Surguja 6.9 7.0 5.0 6.9 7.1 3.0

64
CHHATTISGARH

AVERAGE MONTH BY WHICH CHILDREN RECEIVED FOODS OTHER THAN BREAST MILK
Water Animal/Formula Milk Semi-Solid mashed food
State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 5.4 5.4 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.2 7.4 7.4 7.3
Bastar 6.0 6.0 5.9 6.0 6.1 5.8 7.6 7.6 7.7
Bilaspur 5.3 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.3 7.7 7.7 7.5
Dantewada 5.6 5.5 6.4 5.7 5.7 5.7 7.4 7.3 7.6
Dhamtari 5.8 5.8 5.7 5.3 5.3 5.3 7.3 7.3 7.3
Durg 5.2 5.2 5.1 5.2 5.2 5.1 7.3 7.3 7.2
Janjgir-Champa 5.4 5.4 5.0 5.6 5.6 5.0 7.6 7.6 7.2
Jashpur 5.3 5.3 - 5.5 5.5 - 7.1 7.1 -
Kanker 6.2 6.2 - 5.9 5.9 - 7.7 7.6 -
Kawardha 4.6 4.6 - 5.1 5.1 - 7.3 7.2 -
Korba 5.2 5.1 5.3 5.3 5.3 5.3 7.2 7.1 7.2
Koriya 4.9 4.8 5.2 5.4 5.4 5.4 7.0 6.8 7.5
Mahasamund 6.1 6.1 5.8 5.4 5.4 5.1 7.3 7.3 7.2
Raigarh 5.2 5.2 5.1 5.4 5.4 5.3 7.3 7.3 7.2
Raipur 5.3 5.4 5.1 5.1 5.3 4.8 7.4 7.5 7.3
Rajnandgaon 5.1 5.1 5.1 5.1 5.2 4.7 7.2 7.2 7.3
Surguja 5.2 5.2 5.3 5.6 5.5 5.6 7.4 7.4 7.5

Solid (Adult) Food Vegetables/Fruits


State / District
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
11 12 13 14 15 16
Chhattisgarh 8.7 8.7 8.7 10.8 10.7 10.9
Bastar 9.0 9.0 9.2 10.3 10.2 10.9
Bilaspur 9.0 9.0 8.9 10.8 10.9 10.5
Dantewada 8.8 8.7 9.2 10.4 10.3 11.2
Dhamtari 8.7 8.7 8.7 11.2 11.2 10.9
Durg 8.5 8.5 8.5 10.6 10.6 10.6
Janjgir-Champa 8.8 8.8 8.4 10.6 10.7 9.9
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Jashpur 8.3 8.3 - 9.9 9.9 -


Kanker 9.1 9.0 - 11.4 11.4 -
Kawardha 8.9 8.8 - 11.3 11.3 -
Korba 8.4 8.3 8.6 10.5 10.4 10.9
Koriya 8.3 8.0 9.3 10.0 9.7 11.4
Mahasamund 8.7 8.7 8.5 11.1 11.0 11.3
Raigarh 8.4 8.4 8.2 10.2 10.2 10.3
Raipur 8.7 8.7 8.7 11.5 11.4 11.7
Rajnandgaon 8.7 8.7 8.7 11.2 11.2 10.9
Surguja 8.6 8.6 8.7 10.7 10.7 10.6

65
CHHATTISGARH

BIRTH REGISTRATION
Children whose birth was registered and
Birth Registered (%)
State / District received Birth Certificate (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Chhattisgarh 85.3 83.8 92.7 54.1 51.0 68.9
Bastar 83.9 83.1 95.7 61.7 60.5 78.0
Bilaspur 87.9 87.4 89.4 61.3 59.6 66.6
Dantewada 85.9 84.8 94.9 56.9 54.4 78.5
Dhamtari 90.7 90.4 93.4 55.9 54.3 69.5
Durg 92.1 91.1 94.3 60.9 56.8 69.2
Janjgir-Champa 85.9 86.6 79.3 52.6 51.5 65.0
Jashpur 86.3 86.3 - 46.4 46.1 -
Kanker 83.5 82.9 - 55.9 55.0 -
Kawardha 85.6 84.8 - 57.8 57.2 -
Korba 88.1 86.1 91.8 54.5 47.6 67.4
Koriya 78.1 75.0 91.2 49.8 43.1 77.5
Mahasamund 95.9 96.0 94.7 49.4 48.4 59.3
Raigarh 93.8 93.4 97.2 52.8 50.0 72.6
Raipur 86.1 83.6 93.6 48.9 43.3 66.1
Rajnandgaon 93.8 93.5 95.9 62.6 60.6 76.5
Surguja 57.6 55.8 90.1 37.4 35.4 73.8

Chhattisgarh: Birth Registration (%)


100
90
80
70
60
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

50
40
30
20
10
0

Received Birth Certificate Birth Registered

66
CHHATTISGARH

AWARENESS ON HIV/AIDS, RTI/STI, HAF/ORS/ORT & ZINC AND ARI/PNEUMONIA


Women who are aware Women who are aware of Women who are aware of
State / District of HIV/AIDS (%) RTI/STI (%) HAF/ORS/ORT & Zinc (%)
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Chhattisgarh 86.8 84.2 96.3 81.8 79.4 90.7 99.3 99.3 99.4
Bastar 74.7 72.5 94.4 64.4 61.5 90.5 99.3 99.3 99.4
Bilaspur 91.1 89.1 94.8 80.5 77.9 85.3 99.9 100.0 99.8
Dantewada 56.3 50.1 93.7 54.1 49.1 84.6 99.3 99.2 99.6
Dhamtari 91.4 90.8 96.3 97.6 97.3 99.8 98.9 99.3 96.1
Durg 96.9 95.5 99.1 90.2 87.8 94.0 99.9 100.0 99.8
Janjgir-Champa 94.7 94.1 99.7 88.9 88.1 96.0 98.5 98.3 99.9
Jashpur 68.1 67.0 - 67.2 65.8 - 99.5 99.5 -
Kanker 93.8 93.7 - 85.7 85.5 - 99.0 98.9 -
Kawardha 80.2 78.4 - 89.9 88.1 - 99.0 99.2 -
Korba 91.1 89.5 93.3 77.4 73.8 82.2 98.7 98.6 98.7
Koriya 80.5 75.5 93.1 84.5 81.2 92.7 99.1 98.9 99.5
Mahasamund 92.2 91.6 96.6 83.1 81.8 93.8 99.6 99.5 100.0
Raigarh 81.9 78.9 98.2 72.7 69.8 88.8 99.7 99.7 99.6
Raipur 99.9 99.9 99.8 93.5 92.3 96.4 99.8 99.8 99.9
Rajnandgaon 89.5 87.1 99.6 83.6 80.7 95.8 98.8 98.6 99.7
Surguja 71.7 69.3 98.9 76.8 74.8 99.6 99.5 99.5 99.7

Women who are aware of danger signs of ARI/Pneumonia (%)


State / District
Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4
Chhattisgarh 92.4 90.8 98.0
Bastar 76.3 74.3 94.0
Bilaspur 96.4 95.6 97.9
Dantewada 70.8 68.9 82.6
Dhamtari 97.5 97.2 99.7
Durg 96.4 95.3 98.1
Janjgir-Champa 97.3 97.1 99.5
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Jashpur 85.6 85.1 -


Kanker 95.1 94.9 -
Kawardha 95.8 95.0 -
Korba 88.5 81.4 98.2
Koriya 96.7 95.4 99.7
Mahasamund 94.2 93.5 99.5
Raigarh 95.5 94.8 99.3
Raipur 95.9 94.2 99.7
Rajnandgaon 96.1 95.4 98.7
Surguja 91.6 90.9 99.2

67
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Women who are aware of HIV/AIDS (%)

100

80

60

40

20

0
Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh: Women who are aware of RTI/STI (%)

100

80

60

40

20

0
Total Rural Urban
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

100

80

60

40

20

0
Total Rural Urban

68
CHHATTISGARH

MORTALITY
Crude Death Rate
State/District Name Total Rural Urban
Total Male Female Total Male Female Total Male Female
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
CHHATTISGARH 7.3 7.8 6.7 7.7 8.1 7.2 5.8 6.7 4.9
Bastar 7.4 8.9 5.9 7.4 8.9 5.9 7.5 8.8 6.1
Bilaspur 7.0 7.5 6.4 7.3 7.5 7.1 6.3 7.4 5.1
Dantewada 8.5 10.1 7.0 8.4 9.8 7.0 9.2 12.1 6.2
Dhamtari 7.5 8.0 6.9 7.5 8.0 6.9 7.6 8.6 6.7
Durg 6.2 6.6 5.8 6.8 6.9 6.7 5.0 5.9 4.1
Janjgir-Champa 7.3 7.6 7.0 7.5 7.8 7.2 5.6 6.0 5.1
Jashpur 9.1 9.3 8.9 9.3 9.4 9.1 4.6 4.8 4.3
Kanker 5.7 6.0 5.3 5.7 6.1 5.4 4.1 4.7 3.4
Kawardha 8.5 9.0 7.9 8.7 9.3 8.1 6.9 7.3 6.4
Korba 6.3 6.9 5.7 7.5 8.1 6.8 4.6 5.0 4.1
Koriya 6.4 6.7 6.1 6.6 6.7 6.5 5.9 6.7 5.0
Mahasamund 8.4 9.0 7.9 8.5 8.9 8.1 7.6 9.2 6.0
Raigarh 7.7 8.2 7.3 8.0 8.5 7.6 5.9 6.6 5.2
Raipur 6.8 7.2 6.4 7.1 7.3 6.9 6.0 6.9 5.1
Rajnandgaon 7.6 8.1 7.0 7.7 8.3 7.2 6.7 7.4 5.9
Surguja 8.6 9.0 8.2 8.9 9.3 8.6 4.6 4.7 4.5

Infant Mortality Rate


State/District Name Total Rural Urban
Total Male Female Total Male Female Total Male Female
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
CHHATTISGARH 46 43 49 48 45 52 34 32 36
Bastar 40 37 42 41 39 43 - - -
Bilaspur 38 37 40 37 36 38 42 41 42
Dantewada 44 40 48 47 43 51 21 20 22
Dhamtari 47 46 48 49 48 50 31 24 38
Durg 35 29 41 43 35 50 18 17 20
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 46 41 52 48 43 54 - - -
Jashpur 56 51 61 57 52 63 - - -
Kanker 46 38 54 46 38 55 - - -
Kawardha 57 59 55 58 61 55 - - -
Korba 48 48 48 56 56 56 32 32 33
Koriya 52 49 55 57 52 63 32 36 28
Mahasamund 57 51 64 59 51 66 44 47 40
Raigarh 55 51 59 54 51 58 59 53 64
Raipur 45 43 47 46 45 48 41 38 45
Rajnandgaon 49 47 51 51 49 52 34 30 39
Surguja 50 49 53 52 50 53 - - -

69
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Crude Death Rate (CDR)

7
Person
6 Male
Female
5

0
Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh: Crude Death Rate(CDR)


12

11

10

7
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Male Female

70
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Infant Mortality Rate (IMR)


60

50

40

Person
Male
30
Female

20

10

0
Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh:Infant Mortality Rate(IMR)


70
65
60
55
50
45
40
35
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

30
25
20

Male Female

71
CHHATTISGARH

MORTALITY
Neo-natal Mortality Rate Post Neo-natal Mortality Rate
State/District Name
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
CHHATTISGARH 32 34 25 14 15 9
Bastar 26 27 - 14 14 -
Bilaspur 27 26 30 12 11 12
Dantewada 29 31 18 15 16 3
Dhamtari 36 37 25 12 12 6
Durg 24 29 14 11 13 5
Janjgir-Champa 32 34 - 14 14 -
Jashpur 36 36 - 21 21 -
Kanker 27 27 - 19 19 -
Kawardha 42 42 - 15 16 -
Korba 38 44 26 10 12 7
Koriya 36 40 21 16 17 12
Mahasamund 38 39 31 19 20 13
Raigarh 39 38 47 16 16 12
Raipur 36 38 32 9 9 10
Rajnandgaon 38 39 29 11 12 5
Surguja 29 29 - 22 23 -

Under Five Mortality Rate (U5MR)


State/District Name Total Rural Urban
Total Male Female Total Male Female Total Male Female
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
CHHATTISGARH 60 58 63 65 62 69 40 38 42
Bastar 52 51 52 54 54 53 - - -
Bilaspur 50 48 52 52 49 55 47 47 46
Dantewada 61 55 67 65 59 72 26 27 25
Dhamtari 56 56 56 58 59 58 35 27 44
Durg 43 34 51 52 42 63 23 19 26
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 58 56 61 60 59 62 - - -
Jashpur 84 76 93 87 78 96 - - -
Kanker 62 61 64 63 61 65 - - -
Kawardha 73 73 72 74 76 72 - - -
Korba 57 57 57 66 66 67 38 38 38
Koriya 67 65 70 75 73 78 41 42 40
Mahasamund 68 65 72 70 67 74 49 47 51
Raigarh 67 64 71 68 65 72 60 56 64
Raipur 55 53 58 58 55 61 48 47 49
Rajnandgaon 57 54 60 60 57 62 39 36 42
Surguja 90 89 91 93 92 95 - - -

72
Chhattisgarh: Infant Mortality Rate(IMR)with it's Component
70

60

50

40

30

20

10

Post Neo-natal Mortality Rate Neo-natal Mortality Rate


CHHATTISGARH

73
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
CHHATTISGARH

Chhattisgarh: Under Five Mortality Rate (U5MR)

70

60

Person
50
Male
Female
40

30

20

10

0
Total Rural Urban

Chhattisgarh: Under Five Mortality Rate (U5MR)

100

90

80

70

60

50
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

40

30

Male Female

74
CHHATTISGARH

MORTALITY
Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR), Maternal Mortality Rate and Life Time Risk
95% Confidence
State/Commissionary Sample Sample Interval Maternal
Maternal Life Time
Female Live MMR Mortality
Deaths Lower Upper Risk
Population Births Rate
Limit Limit
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
CHHATTISGARH 346285 83041 203 244 211 278 20 0.68%
SURGUJA DIVISION
Koriya, Surguja, 47544 12156 33 271 179 364 23 0.81%
Jashpur
BILASPUR DIVISION
Raigarh, Korba, Janjgir- 108526 26047 68 261 199 323 21 0.73%
Champa, Bilaspur
RAIPUR DIVISION
Kawardha,
Rajnandgaon, Durg, 135830 32692 69 211 161 261 17 0.59%
Raipur, Mahasamund,
Dhamtari
BASTAR DIVISION
Kanker, Bastar, 54385 12146 33 272 179 364 20 0.71%
Dantewada

DISTRIBUTION OF MATERNAL AND NON MATERNAL DEATHS BY BROAD AGE GROUP


95% Confidence 95% Confidence
Sample Non
Maternal Interval Interval
Age Group Female Proportion Maternal Proportion
Deaths Lower Upper Lower Upper
Deaths Deaths
Limit Limit Limit Limit
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

15-19 355 16 8 3 13 339 13 12 15

20-24 456 66 33 26 39 390 15 14 17


Annual Health Survey 2012-13

25-29 374 55 27 20 34 319 13 11 14

30-34 334 38 19 12 25 296 12 10 13

35-39 391 17 8 3 14 374 15 13 16

40-44 396 6 3 0 6 390 15 14 17

45-49 428 5 2 -1 5 423 17 15 18

Total 2734 203 100 2531 100

75
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

76
CHHATTISGARH: Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) at Commissionrait level
CHHATTISGARH

300

250

200

150

100

50

0
RAIPUR DIVISION CHHATTISGARH BILASPUR DIVISION SURGUJA DIVISION BASTAR DIVISION
CHHATTISGARH

95% Confidence Interval for Selected Indicators


Crude Birth Rate Crude Death Rate
Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
State/District Name
Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper
Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
CHHATTISGARH 22.9 23.5 23.7 24.5 19.3 20.4 7.1 7.4 7.5 7.8 5.6 6.0
Bastar 19.4 22.5 19.4 22.7 16.9 22.6 6.5 8.2 6.4 8.3 6.2 8.7
Bilaspur 24.6 26.6 25.9 28.3 20.8 24.1 6.5 7.5 6.6 8.0 5.7 6.9
Dantewada 21.4 26.5 21.2 26.8 19.4 27.3 7.6 9.4 7.5 9.4 6.6 11.8
Dhamtari 20.5 22.0 20.8 22.5 16.6 20.3 7.0 7.9 7.0 7.9 6.2 9.0
Durg 19.5 21.1 20.2 22.5 17.4 19.5 5.8 6.5 6.3 7.3 4.5 5.5
Janjgir-Champa 19.8 21.7 20.0 22.0 15.1 21.3 6.9 7.7 7.1 7.9 3.9 7.2
Jashpur 21.2 24.0 21.4 24.3 13.8 19.4 8.3 9.9 8.5 10.1 3.7 5.5
Kanker 19.6 22.0 19.6 22.2 14.3 21.4 5.1 6.3 5.1 6.3 3.4 4.7
Kawardha 27.4 31.4 28.4 32.9 16.7 26.0 7.6 9.3 7.8 9.7 4.7 9.0
Korba 21.8 23.3 24.1 26.2 17.6 19.6 6.0 6.7 7.0 8.0 4.1 5.0
Koriya 19.5 21.7 21.5 24.2 13.7 16.7 5.9 7.0 5.9 7.4 5.1 6.7
Mahasamund 21.8 24.0 22.0 24.4 17.2 24.0 7.9 9.0 7.9 9.1 6.2 9.1
Raigarh 20.4 22.5 20.5 22.9 18.4 21.7 7.3 8.2 7.6 8.5 4.5 7.3
Raipur 24.2 26.1 25.3 27.8 20.5 23.3 6.4 7.2 6.6 7.6 5.5 6.6
Rajnandgaon 23.0 25.0 24.2 26.4 15.0 20.2 7.0 8.2 7.1 8.4 5.0 8.4
Surguja 24.8 27.5 25.7 28.5 12.9 17.8 8.0 9.2 8.3 9.5 3.5 5.8

Infant Mortality Rate Under Five Mortality Rate (U5MR)


Total Rural Urban Total Rural Urban
State/District Name
Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper Lower Upper
Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit Limit
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
CHHATTISGARH 44 48 46 51 30 37 59 62 63 67 37 43
Bastar 31 48 32 50 - - 45 58 47 61 - -
Bilaspur 33 43 31 43 33 50 45 55 46 58 38 55
Dantewada 35 53 37 57 9 33 54 68 58 73 14 39
Dhamtari 41 54 42 56 19 44 50 62 52 64 21 49
Durg 30 40 35 51 14 23 38 47 46 59 17 28
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Janjgir-Champa 40 53 41 55 - - 52 64 54 67 - -
Jashpur 45 67 46 69 - - 75 93 77 96 - -
Kanker 36 55 36 56 - - 54 71 54 71 - -
Kawardha 45 70 45 71 - - 62 83 62 85 - -
Korba 42 55 46 65 26 39 52 62 60 73 31 46
Koriya 44 60 48 66 18 47 58 77 64 86 26 56
Mahasamund 47 67 48 70 26 61 60 76 62 79 28 70
Raigarh 46 64 45 63 29 89 60 74 61 76 43 77
Raipur 40 50 40 53 32 51 51 60 53 64 39 56
Rajnandgaon 41 57 42 60 20 48 50 64 52 68 23 54
Surguja 43 58 44 59 - - 82 97 85 101 - -

77
CHHATTISGARH

95% CONFIDENCE INTERVAL FOR SOME IMPORTANT INDICATORS


Sex Ratio at Birth

State/District Name Total Rural Urban

Lower Limit Upper Limit Lower Limit Upper Limit Lower Limit Upper Limit

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

CHHATTISGARH 943 969 944 973 916 975

Bastar 876 988 886 1005 652 958

Bilaspur 884 965 886 986 830 972

Dantewada 867 972 881 996 671 920

Dhamtari 948 1044 941 1042 887 1203

Durg 951 1043 947 1063 907 1059

Janjgir-Champa 848 940 837 932 837 1195

Jashpur 919 1046 921 1051 607 1239

Kanker 842 970 843 976 604 1072

Kawardha 915 1080 909 1087 796 1240

Korba 962 1054 955 1069 925 1080

Koriya 820 950 813 962 751 1021

Mahasamund 882 1004 871 999 843 1263

Raigarh 939 1052 947 1072 787 1048

Raipur 935 1016 929 1024 898 1053

Rajnandgaon 957 1086 964 1105 792 1100

Surguja 857 952 857 955 681 1111


Annual Health Survey 2012-13

78
Confidential when filled Page No.

ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY HOUSELISTING SCHEDULE


Rural-1, Sample Unit
State Zone District Stratum
Urban-2
Houselisting particulars for first updation round Houselisting particulars for second updation round
Houselisting particulars as per baseline survey (for existing Houses/
Households) and for new Houses/Households for updation survey Status of House/ Status of House/
To be filled for Codes ‘1’ and ‘3’ in Col. 8 To be filled for Codes ‘1’ and ‘3’ in Col. 12
Household Household

If Code ‘1’ in Col. 9, write If Code ‘1’ in Col. 13, write


Name of Head of the the name of the new Head the name of the new Head
Household of the Household as on of the Household as on date
(Code)

(Code)
(Code)

(2 digits)
date of survey of survey

Serial No.
Household No.

Building Number
House No. (4 digits)
Status of the House
date of survey) (Code)
date of survey) (Code)
Status of the Household

Status of the Household

Status of the House (as on


Status of the House (as on

(existing as on 01.01.2011)
If Head of the Household is
If Head of the Household is

changed, write ‘1’, if not, ‘2’


(existing as on 01.01.2012) #
changed, write ‘1’, if not, ‘2’

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

For new houses, the record is to be appended at the end of the houselist and Code ‘4’ is to be assigned in Col. 4 during updation rounds. New houses can be in an existing structure or, altogether a new structure.
In case of addition of new households in an existing house or replacement of an existing household by a new household or change in status from non residential/ vacant to residential/partly residential, the
records should also be appended at the end of houselist. For such cases, Code given for status of house in Col. 7 during first updation should be copied in Col. 4. In all cases (including houses/households having
no change in status), record present status of house/household in Cols. 11-12. For new household(s), record the name of head of the household in Col. 6 only. Cols. 13 & 14 are to be filled only when there is
a change in name of head of the household as on date of survey. Cols. 7-10 are not to be filled in during this updation round.

Code for Col. (4) Code for Col. (7, 11) Code for Col. (8, 12)
Item Code Item Code Item Code
Residential 1 Residential/Partly residential 1 Household continues in the
Non-residential 2 same house 1
Non-residential 2
Out-migrated
Vacant 3 Vacant 3 (out of the unit) 2
# Status as on 01.01.2012 is to be recorded. New House 4 Does not exist 0 Shifted within the unit 3
(For Households not existing as on 01.01.2012, put ‘–’ in Col. 12) In-migrated
CHHATTISGARH

(from outside the unit) 4


Split household 5
Merged household 6
ANNEXURE

79
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

80
CHHATTISGARH
SIDE - ‘A’ Confidential when filled Page No. ..........

ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY HOUSEHOLD SCHEDULE


Rural-1, Sample House Household
State Zone District Stratum
Urban-2 Unit No.* No.*
(i) Cols. 2, 3, 6, 8 & 13 are to be copied for all usual residents (Code 01-06 in Col. 4 of the first updation HH Schedule) listed during first updation survey. In Col.1, running serial numbers starting with 1 is to be
given to each copied record and serial number next to the last serial number is to be given for new members being listed during current updation round.
(ii) Cols. 1–3 are to be filled in for all usual residents as on date of survey excluding those who have been covered in (i) above.
(iii) Cols. 1–3 are also to be filled for new born died during (iv) For the above three categories, Residential Status (v) Col. 5 onwards are to be filled only in respect of usual residents as on 01.01.2012
01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011. is to be updated in Col. 4. (i.e. Codes ‘01’ to ‘06’ in Col. 4).
For age group
To be recorded 6-17 years
Name from Col. 1
Identification
(In case of new Code of Date of Birth Date of first marriage
household, start members of the

(Code)
with the Head of the Household
(Code)

Serial No.
above) (Code)

father

on 01.01.2012
Religion (Code)

mother
Household)

01.01.2012 (Code)
years and above) (Code)

Whether currently
Never attended - 3)

Serial No. of
Social Group (Code)
Marital Status as on
main reason thereof

(in completed years)

Serial No. of

Relationship to Head
Occupation / Activity Status

Residential Status as
attained (for age 7 years and

Age as on 01.01.2012
during last 365 days (for age 5

No: Attended before -2,

Sex (Male-1, Female-2)


attending school (Yes - 1,

D D M M Y Y Y Y D D M M Y Y Y Y
Highest educational qualification

If Code ‘2’ or ‘3’ in Col. 14,

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

Code for Col. (4) Code for Col. (5) Code for Col. (10) Code for Col. (12) Code for Col. (15) Code for Col. (16) Code for Col. (17)
Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code
Continue to be in the Head 01 Hindu 1 Never married 1 School too far 1 Illiterate 0 Cultivator 01
same household 01 Agricultural Wage Labourer 02
Wife or Husband 02 Muslim 2 Married but, Gauna not performed 2 Literate without Formal education 1
But died or outmigrated Further education not considered Non-agricultural Wage Labourer 03
thereafter # 02 Son or Daughter 03 Christian 3 Married and, Gauna performed 3 necessary 2 Literate with Formal Education Self Employed (excluding Cultivators)
In migrated from Son-in-law or Sikh 4 Remarried 4 Own Account Worker 04
Usual Below Primary 2
outside the unit 03 Daughter-in-law 04 Required for work in Household Employer 05
Resident Buddhist 5 Widow/Widower 5 activities/Farm/Family business 3 Primary (5th passed) 3
as on Shifted into the house- Grand child 05 Unpaid Family Labourer 06
01.01.2012 hold (Within the unit) 04 Jain 6 Divorced 6
Middle (8th passed) 4 Regular Salaried/Wage Employee 07
Parent 06 Separated 7 Required for outside work 4
Newly born 05 Others 7 Did not work but was seeking and/or available
Parent-in-law 07 Secondary/Matric/Class-X 5 for work 08
Temporary Absentees # 06 No religion 8 Not stated 8 Not interested in studies 5
Brother or Sister 08 Hr. Secondary/Sr. Secondary/ Attending educational institution 09
Out migrated 07 Pre-university/Class-XII 6 Attending routine domestic chores, etc. 10
Shifted out of the household Brother-in-law or Cost too much 6
Code for Col. (11) * = To be copied from Houselisting Schedule Beggar 11
(Within the unit) 08 Sister-in law 09 Graduate/B.Tech/BBA/MBBS/
Equivalent 7 Sex worker/Prostitute 12
Died 09 Niece or Nephew 10 Item Code # = To be filled upto Col. 13 only Repeated failures 7
Rentier, pensioner, other remittance
CHHATTISGARH

New born died (01.01.2011 – SC 1 Post Graduate/M.Tech/MBA/MD/ recipients 13


Other relatives 11
Got married 8 Equivalent or higher 8 Not able to work due to disability 14
31.12.2011) 10
Adopted/Foster child 12 ST 2
Not a usual resident of the Non-Technical/Technical diploma Too old to work 15
Not related 13 Others 3 Others 9 or certificate not equivalent to degree 9 Others 16
household 11

81
Annual Health Survey 2012-13
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

82
SIDE - ‘B’ Confidential when filled

ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY HOUSEHOLD SCHEDULE


Morbidity Status
Acute illness Access to Health scheme/
Injury (During last 15 days) Chronic illness (During last 1 year)
Insurance
Name Not to be asked if Code ‘00’ in Col. 24

If Code ‘1’ in Col.


(Start with Head of 28, then top two
the Household) health schemes/
CHHATTISGARH

health insurance in

survey? (Code)
(Code)
(Code)
(Code)

Serial Number
order of priority

in Col. 22)
(Code)
(Code)
(Code)

year (Code)
know - 3)

Disability as on date of
(Code)

treatment

Source of
diagnosis
of treatment
by any health

(Code) (Applicable
Has diagnosed for

Whether having any form of


injury during last 1
1, No - 2, Don’t

for Codes ‘01’ to ‘13’

to illness persisting
Getting regular

Source of Treatment
If Code ‘1’ or ‘2’

Type of Treatment for


Whether covered
insurance? (Yes -

Sought medical care


scheme or health

Type of illness (Code)


for more than 1 month
P1 P2

Symptom(s) pertaining
in Col. 26, source
1 2 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
Enumerator with date
Name and signature of the
Telephone/Mobile Number:

Name & signature/thumb impres-


sion of the Respondent with date

Code for Col. (18) Code for Col. (20) Code for Col. (21, 25, 27) Code for Col. (22) Code for Col. (24) Code for Col. (24) Contd.
Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code
Diabetes 01 Rheumatic fever/Rheumatic heart disease 26
Mental 1 Acute Illnesses GOVERNMENT Diseases of respiratory system 01 Hypertension 02 Tumour (any type) 27
Visual 2 Diseases of cardiovascular system 02 Chronic heart disease 03 Blood Cancer/Leukemia 28
Sub center 01
Diarrhoea 1 Diseases of central nervous system 03 Myocardinal infarction/Heart attack 04 Skin Cancer 29
Hearing 3
PHC 02 Diseases of musculo-skeletal system 04 Stroke/Cerebrovascular accident 05 Piles, Anal Fissure, Anal Fistula 30
Speech 4 Dysentery 2 CHC 03 Diseases of gastrointestinal system 05 Epilepsy 06 Anaemia 31
Locomotor 5 Asthma/Chronic respiratory disease 07 Others (Hernia, Hydrocele, Peptic Ulcer, etc. 99
Acute respiratory infection 3 UHC/UHP/UFWC 04 Diseases of genitourinary system 06
Multiple 6 Goitre/Thyroid disorder 08 Not diagnosed 00
Skin diseases 07
Dispensary/Clinic 05 Tuberculosis 09
Others 7 Jaundice with fever 4 Goitre 08 Code for Col. (26)
Hospital 06 Leprosy 10
No Disability 0 Elephantiasis 09 Cancer-Respiratory System 11 Item Code
Fever with chill/rigors AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 07 Eye problems/diseases 10 Cancer-Gastrointestinal system 12 Not regularly 1
(malaria etc.) 5 Yes
Code for Col. (19) PRIVATE ENT problems/diseases 11 Cancer-Genitourinary system 13 Regularly 2
Mouth and dental problems 12 Cancer-Breast 14 No 3
Item Code Fever of short duration with Dispensary/Clinic 08 Renal stone 15
Others 13 Code for Col. (29)
Treated in intensive care unit for any time 1 rashes 6 Chronic renal disease 16
Hospital 09 No symptoms of chronic disease 99
Treated as in patient with stay > 2 weeks 2 Gall stone/Cholecystitis 17 Item Code
Other types of fever 7 AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 10
Chronic liver disease 18 Employees State Insurance Scheme(ESIS) 1
Treated as in patient with stay 1 to 2 weeks 3 Code for Col. (23)
NGO or Trust Hospital/Clinic 11 Rheumatoid arthritis/Osteoarthritis 19 Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) 2
Treated as in patient with stay < 1 week 4 Reproductive tract infections Item Code Chronic skin diseases/Psoriasis 20
DOT Center (only for Col. 27) 12 Central/State Government Health Scheme
(RTI) 8 Details of diagnosis/treatment Cataract 21 other than RSBY 3
Treated as out patient 5
At Home 13 not available 1 Glaucoma 22 Medical reimbursement from employer 4
Treated by traditional healers 6 Others 9 Yes
Others 99 Details of diagnosis/treatment Sinusitis, Tonsillitis 23 Community Health Insurance Programme 5
Treated at home 7 available 2 Flourosis 24 Mediclaim 6
No injury 0
No Illness 0 No Treatment 00 No 3 Pyorrhea 25 Others 7
CHHATTISGARH

Confidential when filled

ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY


WOMAN SCHEDULE

State Zone

District Rural - 1/ Urban - 2 Stratum

Sample Unit

House No. Household No.

Section I – Ever Married Woman (Aged 15–49 years)


Sl. No., Name, Identification Code, Age, Marital Status, Highest educational qualification and Occupation/ Activity Status are
to be copied from Col. 1, 2, 6, 9, 12, 16 & 17 respectively of the Household Schedule. However, Marital Status, Highest
educational qualification and Occupation/ Activity Status should be probed from the woman and in case of any variations,
the response given by the woman should be recorded in the relevant columns of the Household Schedule by according
priority.

Marital Highest educational Occupation/


Sl. No. Name Identification Code Age Status Qualification Activity
(Code) * attained (Code) Status (Code)

* If Code ‘2’ (Married but, Gauna not performed), go to Section II of the Schedule.

Q. No. Questions and Codes Responses

Yes-1, No-2
Q.1 Have you ever conceived? If Code '2', go to Section II
of the Schedule

Record the number


Q.2 If Yes, how many times have you
conceived?

Q.3 What was your age at first conception ?


(in completed years)

Q.4 Have you delivered a live baby before Yes-1, No-2


01.01.2012? If Code '2', go to Q.7
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Record the number


Q.5 How many children have been born alive
Male Female Total
ever before 01.01.2012 and out of them
how many are surviving as on 01.01.2012? Born Alive

Surviving

Q.6 What was your age at first live birth?


(in completed years)

Q.7 Has the outcome of any pregnancy(s) Yes-1, No-2


resulted in live birth/still birth/abortion If Code '2', go to Section II
during 01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011? of the Schedule

1 83
CHHATTISGARH

Q.8 If Code ‘1’ (Yes) in Q.7, record the history of outcome(s) of pregnancy(s). Start with the last pregnancy excluding
the current one. Use separate lines for twins/triplets. Same pregnancy number to be recorded for twins/triplets.

To be filled for Induced or Spontaneous abortions (Code '3' or '4' in Col. 2)


If Code '1' Whether At what Did you Did you go Where Who Only for
or '2' in pregnancy month of receive for was the performed/ induced
Col. 2, confirmation pregnancy any ultrasound abortion completed abortion
Pregnancy Outcome of record test did ANC? before this performed/ the
Number Pregnancy the sex of was done abortion (Yes-1, abortion? completed? abortion? Why did
(to be the baby by using happen? No-2) (Yes-1, (Code) (Code) you abort
recorded) (Male-1, NPT kit? No-2) the
Female-2) (Yes-1, pregnancy?
No-2) (Code)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Live Birth-1
(........)
Still Birth-2
Last
Induced Abr.-3
pregnancy
Spont Abr.-4

(........) Live Birth-1


Still Birth-2
Previous
to last Induced Abr.-3
pregnancy Spont Abr.-4
Live Birth-1
(........)
Still Birth- 2
Second
Induced Abr.-3
from last
pregnancy Spont Abr.-4

Note: If outcome(s) of pregnancy(s) resulted in ‘only Abortion(s)’, go to Section II of Schedule after filling
Columns 4 to 10 of Q.8.

Code for Col.8 (Q.8) Code for Col.9 (Q.8)


Item Code Item Code
GOVERNMENT Doctor 1
Sub - Center 01 Nurse / ANM / LHV 2
Trained dai 3
PHC 02
Untrained dai 4
CHC 03
Family members / Relatives / Friends 5
UHC / UHP / UFWC 04
None / Self 6
Dispensary / Clinic 05
Others 7
Hospital 06
Code for Col.10 (Q.8)
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 07
Item Code
PRIVATE
Unplanned pregnancy 1
Dispensary / Clinic 08 Due to contraceptive failure 2
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Hospital 09 Complication(s) in pregnancy 3


AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 10 Health did not permit 4
Female foetus 5
NGO or Trust Hosp. / Clinic 11
Economic reason(s) 6
Self 12
At Home Last child too young 7
Elsewhere 13 Foetus had congenital abnormality 8
Others 99 Others 9

84
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 Details about the last two outcome of pregnancy(s) which resulted in live birth (surviving / not surviving) / still
birth during 01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011. Begin with last birth. Survival status to be assessed as on 01.01.2012.
Questions 9 (1) to 9 (45) are to be probed for live births (surviving/not surviving) as well as still births unless otherwise specified.

Q. No. Questions and Codes Responses

Q.9 (1) Pregnancy number of last two live /


still birth(s) in Chronological order Last birth Previous to last birth
[Copy from Col. 1 (Q.8)] Pregnancy
Number

Q.9 (2) What kind of birth is / was it?

Item Code
Live birth surviving 1 Last birth Previous to last birth
Live birth not surviving 2
Still birth 3

(If Code '3' is recorded for any of the


births, go to Q.9 (6) for that particular birth)

Last birth Previous to last birth


Q.9 (3) What is the order of live birth? Order of live
(If more than 9, record '9' only) birth

Q.9 (4) Only if birth order >= 2


Last birth Previous to last birth
Interval
What is the interval between the previous
(in completed
and current live births?
months)
(If more than 99 months, record '99' only)

Last birth Previous to last birth


Q.9 (5) Identification Code (only for live birth Identification
surviving) – To be copied from Col. 6 Code
of the Household Schedule

Q.9 (6) What is/was the date of birth of the baby?


Last birth Previous to last birth
(In case of still birth, record only month Date of Birth D D M M Y Y Y Y D D M M Y Y Y Y
and year)

Q.9 (7) What type of birth was it?


Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Single 1
Multiple 2

ANTE NATAL CARE (ANC)


Q.9 (8) Did you get your pregnancy registered
for each birth? Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2
(Record Code '2' only after ascertaining If Code ‘2’, go to
that the woman has not received any Q.9 (15)
ANC for that particular birth)

85
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (9) How many months pregnant were you Number of Last birth Previous to last birth
at the time of first ANC ? completed
months

Q.9 (10) How many ANCs did you receive during Last birth Previous to last birth
pregnancy associated with each birth? Number of
(If more than 9 ANCs, record '9' only) ANCs

Q.9 (11) What was the main source of ANC ?

Item Code
GOVERNMENT
Anganwadi 00
Sub - Center 01
PHC 02
CHC 03 Last birth Previous to last birth
UHC / UHP / UFWC 04
Dispensary / Clinic 05
Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 07
PRIVATE
Dispensary / Clinic 08
Hospital 09
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hospital/Clinic 11
Others 99

Q.9 (12) What were the type of tests performed Type of tests Last birth Previous to last birth
during the ANC? performed (in numbers) (in numbers)
(Read out the type of tests performed)
Abdominal
Examination

Blood Pressure
(Record the total number of tests
Breast
performed across all ANCs. If any of
Examination
the tests were performed more than
9 times, record ‘9’ only) Weight
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Measurement

Urine test

Blood (for Hb
estimation)

Blood group test

Blood (for other


tests)

Ultrasound

86
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (13) (i) How many TT injections did you


Last birth Previous to last birth
receive?
Number of TT
injections

(ii) How many months pregnant were you Number of Last birth Previous to last birth
at the time of 2nd TT injection? completed
months

Q.9 (14) For how many days did you consume Last birth Previous to last birth
Iron & Folic Acid (IFA) tablets / tablespoons (Number of days) (Number of days)
of IFA syrup during pregnancy?

(Record '000' if not consumed) Tablets

Syrup

Q.9 (15) If Code '2' is recorded for any of the births


in Q.9 (8), what was the main reason of not
going for any ANC for that particular birth?
Item Code
Not needed 1
Not customary 2 Last birth Previous to last birth
Cost too much 3
Too far / no transport 4
Poor quality service 5
Family did not allow 6
No time to go 7
Lack of knowledge 8
Others 9

Q.9 (16) Did you suffer from any of the health Health
problem(s) during pregnancy associated Problems Last birth Previous to last birth
with each birth?
Swelling of hands,
(Read out the health problems) feet and face
Paleness/
Giddiness/
Weakness
Item Code Visual
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

disturbances
Yes 1
Excessive
No 2
Fatigue
Convulsions not
from fever
Weak or no
movement of foetus
Abnormal position
of foetus

Excessive
vomiting

87
CHHATTISGARH

Health
Last birth Previous to last birth
Problems
Hypertension/
High BP

Jaundice

Excessive bleeding

Vaginal discharge

Others

Q.9 (17) If Code '1' is recorded for any of the


health problem(s) in Q.9 (16), did you
seek treatment? Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (18) If Code '1' in Q.9 (17), where did you go


for consultation or to seek treatment?
Item Code
GOVERNMENT
Sub - Center 01
PHC 02
CHC 03
UHC / UHP / UFWC 04 Last birth Previous to last birth
Dispensary / Clinic 05
Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 07
PRIVATE
Dispensary / Clinic 08
Hospital 09
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hospital / Clinic 11
At Home 12
Others 99
NATAL CARE
Q.9 (19) Where did your delivery take place?

Item Code
GOVERNMENT
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Sub - Center 01
PHC 02
CHC 03
UHC / UHP / UFWC 04 Last birth Previous to last birth
Dispensary / Clinic 05
Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 07
PRIVATE
Dispensary / Clinic 08
Hospital 09
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hospital / Clinic 11
At Home 12
Others 99

88
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (20) If Code '12' in Q.9 (19), what was the


main reason for not going to health
facility for delivery?

Item Code
Not needed 01
Not customary 02 Last birth Previous to last birth
Cost too much 03
Too far / no transport 04
Poor quality service 05
Family decision 06
No time to go 07
Lack of knowledge 08
Better care at home 09
Others 10

Q.9 (21) In case of institutional delivery [for Code


‘1-11’ in Q.9 (19)], who facilitated or Last birth Previous to last birth
motivated you to go to the health facility
for delivery and where did she/he advise Facilitator/ Recom- Facilitator/ Recom-
you to go? Motivator mended Motivator mended
health health
(Read out all facilitators/ motivators facility facility
mentioned)
Code for Facilitator/Motivator Doctor

Item Code
ANM
Yes 1
No 2 Health
Worker
Code for health facility
Anganwadi
Item Code Worker

Government
ASHA
Sub - Center 01
PHC 02
NGO/CBO
CHC 03
UHC/UHP/UFWC 04 Husband
Dispensary/Clinic 05
Hospital 06 Mother-in-law
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 07
Private Mother
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Dispensary/Clinic 08
Relatives/
Hospital 09 Friends
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hospital/Clinic 11 Self

Others 99
Others

89
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (22) In case of institutional delivery [for


Code ‘1-11’ in Q.9 (19)], what was the
source of transport provided/availed
by you for reaching the institution?

Item Code Last birth Previous to last birth

Arranged by family 1
Arranged by ASHA 2
Provided by panchayat/
other govt. sources 3
Provided by others 4
Not required(< 1 Km) 5
Not provided 6

Q.9 (23) In case of institutional delivery [for Code


‘1-11’ in Q.9 (19)], what was the main
mode of transportation used by you to
reach the health facility for delivery?

Item Code
Ambulance 1 Last birth Previous to last birth

Jeep/Car 2
Motor Cycle/Scooter 3
Bus/Train 4
Tempo/Auto/Tractor 5
Rickshaw/Cart 6
On foot 7
Others 8

Q.9 (24) In case of institutional delivery [for


Last birth Previous to last birth
Code ‘1-11’ in Q.9 (19)], how long did
you stay in the institution after delivery? H/D No. H/D No.
(Record in Hours (H), if stay <= 48 hrs, in
Days (D) otherwise)

Q.9 (25) In case of institutional delivery [for Last birth Previous to last birth
Code ‘1-11’ in Q.9 (19)], how much it cost (Amount in Rs.) (Amount in Rs.)
out of your pocket on the following
items during delivery?
Transporation
(Cost should exclude the amount
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

reimbursed / to be reimbursed)
Others

Q.9 (26) Did you avail any maternity financial


assistance?
Item Code
Janani Suraksha 1 Last birth Previous to last birth
Yojana (JSY)
Availed Other Govt schemes
(Other than JSY) 2
Any Other 3
Not Availed 4

90
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (27) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (26), then


Last birth Previous to last birth
(i) How many days after the delivery,
(Number of days) (Number of days)
did you receive financial
assistance?
(ii) What was the total amount
received by you during pregnacy
and/or after delivery? Last birth Previous to last birth
(Amount in Rs.) (Amount in Rs.)

Q.9 (28) Was the delivery normal, caesarean or


assisted? Last birth Previous to last birth

Item Code
Normal 1
Caesarean 2
Assisted 3

Q.9 (29) During delivery, did you experience


Health Problems Last birth Previous to last birth
any of the health problems associated
with each birth? Premature
labour
(Read out all health problems)
Excessive
Item Code bleeding
Yes 1
No 2 Prolonged
labour (More than
12 hours)
Obstructed
labour

Breech
Presentation
Convulsion/
High BP

Others

Q.9 (30) In case of delivery at home [Code ‘12’ in


Q. 9 (19)], who conducted your delivery?
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Item Code
Last birth Previous to last birth
Doctor 1
Nurse / ANM / LHV 2
Trained dai 3
Untrained dai 4
Family members / 5
Relatives / Friends
None 6

91
CHHATTISGARH

POST NATAL CARE

Q.9 (31) Did you have any check-up within


48 hours of delivery?

Item Code Last birth Previous to last birth


Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (32) If Code ‘2’ in Q.9 (31), after how many


days of delivery, the first check-up
took place? Last birth Previous to last birth
Number of
Days
[If no check-up was done at all for any
of the births, record '00' for that
particular birth and go to Q.9 (35)]

Q.9 (33) Where did your Post Natal check-up


take place?
Item Code
GOVERNMENT
Sub Center 01
PHC 02 Last birth Previous to last birth
CHC 03
UHC / UHP / UFWC 04
Dispensary / Clinic 05
Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 07
PRIVATE
Dispensary / Clinic 08
Hospital 09
AYUSH Hospital / Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hospital/Clinic 11
Others 99

Q.9 (34) Did any of the following happen when Last birth Previous to last birth
you had the check-up after each birth?
Abdomen
(Read out all options mentioned)
examined
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Item Code Advice on breast


Yes 1 feeding

No 2 Advice on
baby care

Advice on family
planning

10

92
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (35) When was the new born baby checked up


after birth?

(To be asked only in respect of live births


surviving or not surviving)
Item Code
Last birth Previous to last birth
Within 24 hrs 1

Checked 24 hrs to 72 hrs 2


Up 4th day to 7th day 3
After the 7th day 4
Not checked up 5

Q.9 (36) If Code ‘1’ or ‘2’ or ‘3’ in Q.9 (35), number of


check-up(s) during one week of delivery Last birth Previous to last birth

Q.9 (37) If Code ‘1-4’ in Q.9 (35), where was the


baby's first check-up done?

Item Code
Government
Sub - Center 01
PHC 02
CHC 03 Last birth Previous to last birth
UHC/UHP/UFWC 04
Dispensary/Clinic 05
Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 07
Private
Dispensary/Clinic 08
Hospital 09
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hosp/Clinic 11
At Home 12
Others 99
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Q.9 (38) If Code ‘12’ in Q.9 (37), who did the check-up
at home?
Item Code
Doctor 1 Last birth Previous to last birth
ANM 2
Health worker 3
Anganwadi worker 4
ASHA 5
Others 6

11

93
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (39) During the first 6 weeks after delivery, Health Problems Last birth Previous to last birth
did you experience any of the health
problems?
High fever
(Read out all health problems)
Item Code Lower abdominal
pain
Yes 1
No 2 Foul smelling
vaginal discharge

Excessive
bleeding

Convulsions

Head ache

Others

Q.9 (40) If Code '1' in any of the health problems


in Q.9 (39), did you seek treatment? Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (41) If Code '1' in Q.9 (40), where did you go for
consultation or to seek treatment?
Item Code
Government
Sub - Center 01
PHC 02
Last birth Previous to last birth
CHC 03
UHC/UHP/UFWC 04
Dispensary/Clinic 05
Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 07
Private
Dispensary/Clinic 08
Hospital 09
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hosp/Clinic 11
Others 99

Q.9 (42) Whether birth weight of the baby was


taken?
(To be asked only in respect of live Last birth Previous to last birth
births surviving or not surviving)
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2
Don’t Know 3

12

94
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (43) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (42), what was the birth Last birth Previous to last birth
weight of the baby?
Kg gms Kg gms
Birth weight

Q.9 (44) When did you first breast feed your


baby?
(To be asked only in respect of live
births surviving or not surviving)
Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Immediately within 1 hour
of birth 1
1 hour to 24 hours of birth 2 If Code '5'
2-3 days 3 go to Q.9 (48)
After 3 days 4
Never breast-fed 5

Q.9 (45) Did you feed “milk colostrum/khees”


(yellowish thick milk) to your baby,
secreted during the first few days after
child birth? Last birth Previous to last birth

(To be asked only in respect of live


births surviving or not surviving)

Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

The following questions are to be probed only for live births and surviving.
BREAST FEEDING PRACTISE

Q.9 (46) Are you currently breastfeeding your Baby’s Name


baby?

Item Code Last birth Previous to last birth


Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (47) How many days/months did you


Annual Health Survey 2012-13

exclusively breastfeed your baby?

(If duration of breastfeeding is less than Last birth Previous to last birth
one month, record no. of days and if
duration is in months, record no. D/M No. D/M No.
of months)

Unit Code
Days D
Months M

13

95
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (48) At what age (in months/days) did you start Last birth Previous to last birth
feeding the baby, food other than Type of food
D/M No. D/M No.
breast milk?
(If only breast feeding, record ‘00’) Water

(If duration of starting other types of food Animal Milk/


is less than one month, record no. of Formula Milk
days and if duration is in months, record
Semi Solid
no. of months)
Mashed
Unit Code
Solid (Adult
Days D food)
Month M
Vegetables/
Fruits

IMMUNIZATION

Q.9 (49) Do you have an Immunization/MCH card


for your baby?
Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (50) If Code '1' in Q.9 (49), whether


Immunization card made available Last birth Previous to last birth
at the time of interview?
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (51) If card made available, whether


information recorded by using
the card? Last birth Previous to last birth

Item Code
Yes 1
No 2
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Q.9 (52) Has the baby ever received any


vaccination?
Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

(If Code '2' for any births, go to Q.9 (56) for


that particular birth)

14

96
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (53) Was the baby given BCG vaccine?

Item Code
At birth 1 Last birth Previous to last birth

Yes Within 6 weeks 2


Thereafter 3

No 4

Q.9 (54) Were the following vaccines


administered to your baby? Type of Vaccine Last birth Previous to last birth

(Read out the type of vaccines) Polio birth dose


(Yes-1, No-2, Don’t
# If more than 9 doses, record ‘9’ only Know-3)
for that particular birth. * No. of Polio doses
in routine
* If no vaccination received, record ‘0’
immunization (RI)
for that particular birth.
other than the birth
dose
# No. of Polio doses
in PP (Pulse Polio)
immunization during
last one year
* No. of DPT
injections
Measles (Yes-1,
No-2, Don’t Know -3)
* No. of doses of
Hepatitis B during
last one year

Q.9 (55) From where did the baby receive


most of his/her vaccinations?

Item Code
Government
Anganwadi 00
Sub - Center 01
Last birth Previous to last birth
PHC 02
CHC 03
UHC/UHP/UFWC 04
Dispensary/Clinic 05
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Hospital 06
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 07
Private
Dispensary/Clinic 08
Hospital 09
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 10
NGO or Trust Hosp/Clinic 11
Others 99

15

97
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9 (56) If no vaccination was received by your


baby, what was the main reason thereof?
Item Code Last birth Previous to last birth
Child is weak/sick 1
Not aware of the need 2
Place of immunization is 3
not known
Session site too far 4
Fear of side effects 5
Nobody to take child to 6
session site
Not customary 7
Child too young 8
Others 9

Q.9(57) Number of Vitamin A doses received by Last birth Previous to last birth
your baby during last six months? No. of
Vitamin A
(If not received, record ‘0’) doses

Q.9 (58) Was IFA tablet/syrup administered to


your baby, in the last 3 months? Last birth Previous to last birth

(To be asked for babies older than 6


months)
Item Code
Tablets 1
Yes Syrup 2

No 3

Q.9 (59) If Code '1' or '2' in Q.9 (58), then for how Last birth Previous to last birth
many days was it given in the last 3 No. of
months? Days

CHILD HEALTH

Q.9 (60) Did the baby suffer from Acute


Respiratory Infection (ARI) during
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

last 15 days? Last birth Previous to last birth


Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (61) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (60), was the baby given
any treatment? Last birth Previous to last birth

Item Code
Antibiotic 1
Other treatment 2
No treatment 3

16

98
CHHATTISGARH

Q.9(62) Did the baby suffer from fever during


last 15 days? Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (63) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (62), was the baby given
any treatment? Last birth Previous to last birth
Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (64) Did the baby suffer from diarrhoea


during last 15 days? Last birth Previous to last birth

Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

Q.9 (65) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (64), did you administer


Last birth Previous to last birth
HAF/ ORT/ ORS and Zinc to the baby?

Item Code HAF


Yes 1
No 2 ORT/ORS

ORT/ORS & Zinc

Q.9 (66) Have you availed Anganwadi services


during the pregnancy and/or lactation Last birth Previous to last birth
associated with each birth?
During Pregnancy
Item Code
Yes 1
During Lactation
No 2

REGISTRATION OF BIRTH

Q.9 (67) Is the birth of your baby registered ?


Last birth Previous to last birth
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Item Code
Yes 1
No 2
Don’t know 3

Q.9 (68) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (67), did you receive


Birth Certificate for your baby ? Last birth Previous to last birth

Item Code
Yes 1
No 2

17

99
CHHATTISGARH

Section II – Currently Married Woman (Aged 15-49 years)

Q.1 Which of the family planning Codes Family Planning Methods Awareness
method (s) are you aware of? (Yes - 1, No - 2)

(Read out all the family planning Modern


methods) 01 Tubectomy

02 Vasectomy

03 Copper-T / IUD
04 Pills (Daily)

05 Pills (Weekly)
06 Emergency Contraceptive Pill

07 Condom / Nirodh

08 Injectable Contraceptives

09 Other modern method

Traditional
10 Contraceptive Herbs

11 Rhythm / Periodic Abstinence

12 Withdrawal
[For Married but, Gauna not
13 Lactational Amenorrhoea Method (LAM)
performedgo to Q.21 directly after
recording response of Q.1] 14 Other traditional method

Q.2 Are you currently pregnant?


Yes-1, No-2, Not sure-3 If Code ‘2’
or ‘3’, go
If Code ‘1’, record no. of completed months to Q.6
of pregnancy.

Q.3 Are you registered for ANC?


(Ensure that the woman has not Yes-1, No-2 If Code ‘2’
received any ANC, before recording go to Q.5
Code ‘2’)

Q.4 How many months pregnant were you Number of completed months
at the time of first ANC?

Q.5 When you became pregnant this time, Now 1


Annual Health Survey 2012-13

did you want to become pregnant now, Within 2 years 2


did you want to wait until later, or did you Later
2 years or more 3
not want to have any (more) children at
Did not want any (more) children at all 4
all?
(After recording the response, go to CODE Go to
Q.13) Q.13
Q.6 Are you currently menstruating?
Yes 1 Go to
Lactational Amenorrhoea 2 Q.7
Secondary Amenorrhoea 3
No In Menopause 4 Go to
Uterus Removed 5 Q.13
Never Menstruated 6 Go to
Q. 21
CODE

18

100
CHHATTISGARH

Q.7 When you became mother last time, Then 1


did you want this child then, did you
Later Within 2 years 2
want to wait until later or did you not
want to have any (more) children at 2 years or more 3
all? Did not want any (more) children at all 4

(Applicable for those who have given CODE


atleast one live birth)
If Code
Q.8 Is your husband living with you? Yes-1, No-2
‘2’, go to
Q.13

Q.9 (i) Are you or your husband currently Yes-1, No-2 If Code
using any method(s) of family ‘2’, go to
planning? Q.12
(ii) If Code ‘1’ in Q.9 (i), specify the most If Code
(Use Codes from Q.1)
used method ‘03-14’,
go to
(iii) If Code ‘01’ or ‘02’ in Q.9 (ii), where GOVERNMENT Q.10
did you or your husband got the
Govt. / Municipal hospital 1
operation done?
Govt. Dispensary 2
UHC / UHP / UFWC 3
CHC 4
PHC 5
Camp 6
PRIVATE
Hospital 7
Dispensary / Clinic 8
Others 9
CODE

(iv) Did you/your husband receive the If Code


Yes-1, No-2
compensation after sterilization? ‘2’, go to
Q.20
(v) If Yes, when did you/your husband Before /At the time of discharge 1
receive compensation for At the time of first follow up 2
sterilization?
After several visit 3

CODE

(vi) How much compensation did you/ Amount (In Rs.) Go to


your husband receive? Q.20

Q.10 (i) How long have you or your Less than 6 months 1
husband been using this method 6 months to < 1 year 2
continuously?
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

1 year to < 2 years 3


2 years or more 4
Not remember 5

CODE

(ii) Have you/your husband had any


Yes-1, No-2
health problems after you/your
husband started using this
method?

19

101
CHHATTISGARH

Q.11 From where did you obtain this


PUBLIC MEDICAL SECTOR
method last time?
Govt. / Municipal hospital 01
[Not applicable for Code ‘11’ or ‘12’ Govt. Dispensary 02
or ‘13’ if recorded in Q.9 (ii)]
UHC / UHP / UFWC 03
CHC 04
(After recording the response, go to
PHC 05
Q.17)
Sub centre 06
Govt. AYUSH hospital /clinic 07
Govt. Mobile clinic 08
Camp 09
Anganwadi / ICDS Centre 10
ASHA / ANM 11
Other community based worker 12
Other public sector health facility 13
PRIVATE MEDICAL SECTOR
Pvt. Hospital / clinic 14
Pvt. AYUSH Hospital / clinic 15
ANY OTHER SOURCE
Pharmacy / Shop 16
Husband 17
Friends / Relatives 18
Vending machine 19
Others 20
CODE Go to
Q.17
Q.12 What is the main reason for currently Wanted child now / soon 01
not using any method of family Lack of knowledge about family planning 02
planning?
Against the religion 03
Opposed to family planning 04
Husband opposed 05
Other family members opposed 06
Not liking existing methods 07
Afraid of sterilization/operation 08
Cannot work after sterilization/operation 09
Worry about side effects 10
Costs too much 11
Health does not permit 12
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Difficult / inconvenient to get method 13


Inconvenient to use method 14
Lack of access / Too far 15
Infertility 16
Others 17
CODE

Q.13* (i) Have you /your husband used


Yes-1, No-2 If Code ‘2’,
any method in the past and
go to Q.15
discontinued?
(ii) If Code ‘1’ in Q.13 (i), specify the (Use Codes from Q.1) If Code ‘01’
most used method? or ‘02’, go
to Q.21

20

102
CHHATTISGARH

Q.14* What was the main reason for Wanted child 01


discontinuing the use of the Method failed/became pregnant 02
method in the past? Supply not available 03
Difficult/inconvenient to get method 04
Weakness/inability to work 05
* For Code ‘4’ or ‘5’ in Q.6, skip and
go to Q.21 after recording the Body ache/back ache 06
response(s) in Q.13/Q.14 Cramps 07
Weight gain 08
Dizziness 09
Nausea/Vomiting 10
Breast tenderness 11
Irregular periods 12
Excessive bleeding 13
Spotting 14
White discharge 15
Lack of pleasure 16
Method was inconvenient 17
Others 18

CODE

Q.15 Do you intend to use any method of If Code


Yes-1, No-2
family planning, any time in the future? ‘2’, go to
Q.17

Q.16 If Code ‘1’ in Q.15, then Within 6 months 1


6 months to < 1 year 2
1 year to < 2 years 3
(i) When do you want to use?
2 years or after 4
CODE

(ii) Which method would you prefer


(Use Codes from Q.1)
,

to use?

Want more children 1


Q.17 Would you like to have another child? Want no more children 2
Not decided 3
If Code
(For Currently Pregnant Woman, CODE ‘2’, go to
response should pertain to child other Q. 20
than she is expecting now)

Q.18 What would you prefer as your next Boy 1


child? Girl 2
Doesn’t matter 3
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

CODE

Soon/Now/Less than 1 year 1


Q.19 How long would you like to wait to 1 year to < 2 years 2
have another child?
2 years to < 3 years 3
3 years or more 4
Not decided 5
CODE

21

103
CHHATTISGARH

Q.20 Did an ANM /Health worker visit you


during the last three months? Yes-1, No-2
(Applicable only for currently pregnant
women/lactating mother)

Q.21 Have you ever been counselled by


Health Functionaries for menstrual
Yes-1, No-2
hygiene?

Q.22 Have you heard of RTI/STI?


Yes-1, No-2

Q.23 Have you heard of HIV/AIDS?


Yes-1, No-2

Q.24 Are you aware about the


administration of HAF/ORT/ORS
Home Available Fluids (HAF)
and Zinc during diarrhoea?

Item Code ORT/ORS


Yes 1
ORT/ORS and Zinc
No 2

Q.25 Are you aware of the danger signs of


Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI)/ Yes-1, No-2
Pneumonia?

Q.26 Are you aware of the danger signs of


new born? Yes-1, No-2

Result of Interview CODE Name & Signature of Name & Signature/Thumb


the Enumerator Impression of the Respondent
Completed 1
Not completed
Refused 2
Incapacitated 3
Partly completed 4
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Not at Home 5 D D M M Y Y Y Y
Date of Interview
Others (Please specify) 6

22

104
CHHATTISGARH

Remarks of Enumerator

Name & Signature with Date:

Remarks of Supervisor

Annual Health Survey 2012-13

Name & Signature with Date:

105
Annual Health Survey 2012-13

106
Confidential when filled Page No. ..........

ANNUAL HEALTH SURVEY MORTALITY SCHEDULE


Rural-1, Sample
State Zone District Stratum
Urban-2 Unit
Col. 1 to 3 to be filled for all Households & Col. 4 to 23 for deaths occurred to the usual residents of the sample unit during 01.01.2011 to 31.12.2011. Still births not to be included.
Registration For Infant death For female deceased aged 15-49 years
Age at death
of death (< 1 year) If ‘Yes’ in Col. 17, ask the following
CHHATTISGARH

House No. Name of the Date of Death


(4 digits)* deceased

Serial No.
(Code)

Top two factors

Order of birth
time of death?

death (Code)

Sex of deceased
1 to 11 months

(Male-1, Female-2)
before death (Code)
occurred? (Code)
medical facility (in kms)#

1 year and above


Place of death (Code)
Time between onset of

order of priority (Code)


contributing to death in

If Code ‘1’ in Col. 12,

(in completed years)

Household No. (2 digits)*


certificate? (Yes-1, No-2)
Symptoms preceding

(in completed months)


Period when the death

Was the death associated


was she pregnant at the

If Code ‘1’ or ‘2’ or ‘3’ in


Distance from place (where the

Is the death registered?


Col.18, how many months

Below 1 month (in days)


Serial number of mother

Source of medical attention


whether received the Death
Symptoms preceding death

as in Household Schedule
D D M M Y Y Y Y P1 P2
complications and death (Code)

with pregnancy? (Yes-1, No-2)

(Yes-1, No-2, Don't know-3)


deceased was staying) to the nearest

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23

Code for Col. (10) Code for Col. (11) Code for Col. (16) Contd. Code for Col. (18) Code for Col. (20) Code for Col. (21) Code for Col. (22)
Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code Item Code
GOVERNMENT At home 1 Pre-term/Low birth 09 During antenatal period 1 Delay in receiving health care 1 Excess bleeding 1 < 2 hours 1
Sub Center 01 In-transit 2 weight baby not at facility
PHC 02 In health facility 3 thriving Sepsis 2 2 hours to < 24 hours 2
During delivery 2 Inadequate care at health facility 2
CHC 03 Other places 4 Respiratory infection 10 Pregnancy Induced
Lack of transport in shifting to 3 24 hours to < 2days 3
UHC/UHP/UFWC 04 Diarrhoea / Dysentery 11 During abortion 3 Hypertension (PIH) 3
facility
Dispensary/Clinic 05 Code for Col. (16) Fever with rash 12 2 days to < 7 days 4
Lack of funds 4 Prolonged Labour/ 4
Hospital 06 Fever with convulsion 13 Within 42 days of delivery 4
Item Code Seriousness of the condition 5 Obstructed labour 7 days < 14 days 5
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 07 Fever with jaundice 14
After 42 days of delivery 5 not realized
PRIVATE Asphyxia 01 Others 15 Injury to uterus & other 14 days or more 6
Dispensary/Clinic 08 Seriousness of the condition 6
Hypothermia 02 Neonatal mortality (0-28 days): organs 5
Hospital 09 Within 42 days of abortion 6 realized but decision not made
Infections 03 Codes 01-09 & 15
AYUSH Hospital/Clinic 10 by family members Anaemia 6
Post neonatal mortality
Birth Injuries 04 After 42 days of abortion 7 Others 7
NGO or Trust Hosp/Clinic 11 (29-365 days): Codes 08-15 Jaundice 7
At Home 12 Convulsions soon 05
Others 99 after birth Malaria 8
Name and Signature of the Enumerator
No Medical Attention 00 Jaundice 06 Other medical conditions in
Bleeding from umbilicus 07 SI. No. Name Signature Date
pregnancy 9
* = To be copied from Household Schedule & elsewhere
Enumerator -1: Other conditions not
# = if distance is less than 1 km, record ‘0’ Congenital/Birth defects 08
Enumerator -2: related to pregnancy 0
CHHATTISGARH

LIST OF OFFICERS ASSOCIATED WITH THE FACTSHEET

Vital Statistics Division(Annual Health Survey)

Sl. No. Name Designation

1 Dr. Vijay P. Goel Deputy Director General & Project Director

2 Shri Rohit Bhardwaj Deputy Registrar General

3 Shri Rajeev Kumar Senior Research Officer

4 Shri Muhammed Yasir. F Senior Research Officer

5 Shri Rajesh N. Malvia Deputy Director

6 Shri Deepak Dhanawat Research Officer

7 Shri Narendra Singh Research Officer

8 Shri Harmeet Singh Maddh Assistant Director

9 Shri Mohan K. Tiwary Assistant Director

10 Shri Suresh Kumar Assistant Director

11 Shri Pankaj Shrivastava Statistical Investigator Gr. I

12 Shri Ravinder Kumar Statistical Investigator Gr. I

13 Shri Sandeep Goel Senior Compiler

14 Shri Tufail Ahmad Compiler

15 Smt. Navita Bhatia Compiler

Annual Health Survey 2012-13

107
Chhattisgarh: Coverage along the continuum of care

Pre
Family Planning (Any Method) (%) 60.2 pregnancy

Received any Antenatal Check-up 91.8

Antenatal Check-up in First Trimester 73.6


Pregnancy

Full Antenatal Check up 22.3

Ultrasound 31.9

Safe Delivery 59.1

Check up within 48 hrs 70.3 Birth

Children breastfed within one hour of birth 66.3

Exclusively breastfed for at least six months 50.8

Animal/Formula Milk 44.0 Infancy

Received 3 doses of DPT vaccine 81.8

Received Measles vaccine 90.0

Received at least one Vitamin A dose 68.3

Fully Immunized 74.9

Care sought for ARI 97.9

Care sought for Diarrhoea 93.0


Childhood

Care sought for Fever 95.2

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

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