Gardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Main Authors: Karthikeyan, Harish, Siddiqui, Asad
Formato: Recurso digital
Idioma:inglés
Publicado: Zenodo 2026
Subjects:
Acceso en liña:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19719614
Tags: Engadir etiqueta
Sen Etiquetas, Sexa o primeiro en etiquetar este rexistro!
Table of Contents:
  • <p>Background: India and Pakistan share similar epidemiologic transitions, with declining infectious diseases alongside rising noncommunicable diseases. However, disparities persist in maternal and child health outcomes.</p> <p>Methods: We conducted a comparative analysis using World Health Organization Global Health Observatory country profiles and tuberculosis program data, examining mortality, communicable diseases, nutrition, environmental factors, and health system indicators.</p> <p>Results: India demonstrates better maternal and child health outcomes, with lower under five mortality (29 vs 61 per 1,000), neonatal mortality (18 vs 39), and maternal mortality (80 vs 154 per 100,000). Tuberculosis incidence remains high in both countries but is greater in Pakistan (277 vs 195 per 100,000). Immunization coverage is slightly higher in India (91 percent vs 86 percent). Both countries experience significant undernutrition with similar stunting rates. Environmental risks are substantial in both settings, though India shows greater progress in sanitation and clean cooking fuel use. Pakistan faces lower health workforce density and more constrained service delivery.</p> <p>Conclusions: Despite shared disease burdens, India outperforms Pakistan in key outcomes. Differences in primary care access, maternal and newborn services, environmental conditions, and health system investment drive these disparities.</p>