Content National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6) (2023–24) Goa Statehood Day National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6) (2023–24) Why in News? The Union Ministry of Health & Family Welfare released NFHS-6 (2023–24), India’s most comprehensive household health survey, covering nearly 6.79 lakh households across 715 districts, providing critical evidence for public policy, welfare delivery, and SDG monitoring. Conducted by International Institute for Population Sciences, NFHS-6 is the first round implemented without external financial or technical assistance, reflecting India’s growing institutional and statistical capability in large-scale public health governance. Relevance GS-II: Health, Governance, Welfare Schemes, Social Justice, Women & Child Development. GS-III: Human Resource Development, Demographic Dividend, Nutrition Security, Digital Inclusion. Practice Question Q1.“NFHS-6 reflects India’s transition from an access-centric healthcare system toward a multidimensional public health challenge.” Examine. (250 words) Constitutional & Governance Significance Article 21 strengthens the constitutional basis for healthcare by interpreting the Right to Life as including nutrition, maternal care, disease prevention, and access to dignified healthcare services for vulnerable populations. Directive Principles of State Policy, particularly Articles 39, 42 and 47, obligate the State to improve public health, maternity relief, nutrition levels, and child welfare, making NFHS a critical accountability instrument for welfare governance. NFHS-6 directly measures India’s progress toward SDGs 2, 3, 5 and 10, especially concerning malnutrition reduction, universal healthcare, gender empowerment, and social equity, thereby linking domestic governance with global developmental commitments. 1. Maternal & Child Health: Significant Progress Major Improvements Institutional deliveries increased from 88.6% to 90.6%, indicating expanded healthcare access, improved trust in public health systems, and deeper penetration of maternal welfare schemes into rural and aspirational districts. Coverage of antenatal care (ANC) improved substantially from 92.6% to 95.9%, while women receiving at least four ANC visits increased from 58.5% to 65.2%, showing enhanced continuity in maternal healthcare delivery. Postnatal care within two days of childbirth improved from 79.1% to 85.3%, reflecting stronger frontline health worker networks, institutional follow-up systems, and better awareness regarding neonatal healthcare practices. Governance Drivers Improvements were driven by flagship interventions such as Janani Suraksha Yojana, JSSK, SUMAN, PMMVY, and the strengthened National Health Mission, which collectively enhanced maternal health outreach and institutional support systems. Critical Analysis Despite rising institutional deliveries, the rapid increase in caesarean-section deliveries, especially in private facilities where rates exceed 54%, raises concerns regarding commercialization, medical ethics, and inadequate regulatory oversight within India’s healthcare system. 2. Fertility Transition & Demographic Shift India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) remained at 2.0, indicating that the country has broadly achieved replacement-level fertility and entered an advanced stage of demographic transition with slowing population growth. The decline in child marriage among women aged 20–24 years from 23.3% to 20.1% reflects gradual improvements in female education, social awareness, and delayed marriage patterns across several states. India’s demographic challenge is shifting from population stabilization toward ageing, workforce productivity, pension security, and healthcare preparedness, particularly as southern states begin experiencing advanced demographic ageing patterns earlier than northern states. 3. Immunisation: Public Health Success Story Full immunisation coverage among children aged 12–23 months increased from 83.8% to 87.1%, indicating improved last-mile delivery, vaccine confidence, and strengthened public health logistics after the COVID-19 pandemic experience. Coverage of the rotavirus vaccine dramatically increased from 36.4% to 85.4%, reflecting successful integration of newer vaccines into India’s Universal Immunisation Programme and improved cold-chain management systems. Nearly 95.6% of vaccinations were administered through public health facilities, demonstrating strong community reliance on government healthcare infrastructure and the effectiveness of India’s frontline public health architecture. Digital tools such as U-WIN, combined with ASHA and ANM outreach networks, strengthened immunisation tracking, beneficiary identification, and real-time monitoring of vaccine coverage across districts and states. 4. Nutrition Indicators: Improvement but Persistent Burden Stunting among children under five declined significantly from 35.5% to 29.3%, indicating long-term improvements in nutrition, sanitation, maternal care, and public welfare interventions under convergent nutrition governance. Severe wasting declined from 7.7% to 5.2%, reflecting better management of acute malnutrition through interventions like POSHAN Abhiyaan, Nutrition Rehabilitation Centres, and improved maternal-child feeding practices. Despite progress, India continues to carry one of the world’s largest burdens of child malnutrition, with nearly one-third of children still underweight, revealing persistent structural poverty and dietary deficiencies. Only 15.3% children aged 6–23 months received an adequate diet, highlighting serious deficiencies in dietary diversity, protein intake, and awareness regarding complementary feeding practices among households. 5. Double Burden of Malnutrition NFHS-6 highlights India’s emerging double burden of malnutrition, where undernutrition coexists alongside rising obesity and lifestyle-related disorders, particularly among urban and middle-income populations. Nearly 30.7% women and 27.3% men were found overweight or obese, reflecting increased sedentary lifestyles, processed food consumption, urban stress, and declining physical activity levels. Simultaneously, almost 19.7% adults remain underweight, indicating persistent inequality in food security, nutrition access, and socio-economic development across rural and vulnerable populations. India therefore faces a triple nutritional challenge involving undernutrition, micronutrient deficiency, and obesity-linked non-communicable diseases, requiring differentiated and region-specific nutrition policies. 6. Rising Burden of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) NFHS-6 recorded a sharp increase in adults with high blood sugar levels, with prevalence among men rising from 15.6% to 20.9%, signalling India’s rapidly expanding diabetes burden. Rising obesity, unhealthy diets, urbanisation, stress, and sedentary behaviour are accelerating India’s transition toward an NCD-dominated epidemiological profile, increasing pressure on healthcare infrastructure and insurance systems. India’s health system historically evolved around communicable diseases and maternal-child healthcare; however, future policy priorities must increasingly focus on preventive healthcare, early screening, and chronic disease management. The economic consequences of rising NCDs include productivity losses, increased household medical expenditure, premature mortality, and a growing burden on public health financing mechanisms. 7. Women’s Empowerment & Digital Inclusion Women who had ever used the internet nearly doubled from 33.3% to 64.3%, reflecting the expanding reach of digital infrastructure, smartphones, and online public service delivery systems. Women operating their own bank accounts increased from 78.6% to 89%, indicating the success of Jan Dhan Yojana, DBT architecture, and financial inclusion initiatives targeting women’s economic empowerment. Mobile phone ownership among women rose from 53.9% to 63.6%, strengthening access to digital payments, online services, telemedicine, e-governance, and educational resources. However, digital inclusion does not automatically translate into digital autonomy, as gendered barriers, cyber insecurity, low digital literacy, and patriarchal control still limit meaningful participation of women in the digital economy. 8. Gender-Based Violence: Persistent Social Challenge The proportion of women experiencing spousal violence declined from 29.2% to 22.3%, reflecting gradual improvements in awareness, legal literacy, and reporting mechanisms related to domestic violence. Despite improvement, nearly one in five women continues to face domestic violence, demonstrating the persistence of patriarchal norms, unequal power structures, and socio-cultural acceptance of gender violence in many regions. Violence during pregnancy and early marriage continues to adversely affect maternal health, mental well-being, child nutrition, and intergenerational human development outcomes. Stronger implementation of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, legal aid services, shelter support, and gender-sensitive policing remain essential for addressing structural gender inequalities. 9. Financial Protection & Health Insurance Household coverage under health insurance/financing schemes increased substantially from 41% to 60.2%, indicating rapid expansion of financial protection mechanisms in healthcare. Schemes such as Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY significantly improved healthcare access among economically vulnerable populations and reduced the risk of catastrophic out-of-pocket expenditure for hospitalisation. However, insurance expansion alone cannot ensure universal healthcare unless accompanied by improved public health infrastructure, affordable medicines, quality primary care, and equitable specialist availability. India continues to face high out-of-pocket expenditure due to diagnostics, medicines, outpatient care, and uneven public healthcare quality across states and districts. 10. Demographic & Social Transition The proportion of population below 15 years of age declined from 26.5% to 25.5%, while the elderly population above 60 years increased from 11.8% to 12.9%, signalling gradual population ageing. Ageing populations will increase demand for geriatric healthcare, pension systems, social security, assisted living, and chronic disease management, requiring long-term institutional preparedness. India’s future demographic advantage will depend less on population size and more on investments in health, education, productivity, and human capital development. Key Challenges Significant inter-state disparities continue in nutrition, fertility, healthcare access, and women’s empowerment, indicating uneven administrative capacity and socio-economic development across India. Persistently high anaemia, undernutrition, obesity, and NCD prevalence reveal that healthcare challenges are becoming increasingly multidimensional and interconnected. Shortage of healthcare professionals in rural areas, and inadequate preventive healthcare continue to limit equitable health outcomes. National averages often conceal district-level inequalities, tribal vulnerabilities, urban slum deprivation, and regional social exclusion patterns requiring localized policy interventions. Way Forward India must transition from an access-centric healthcare model toward a quality-centric and preventive healthcare framework, focusing on primary care, family medicine, and early disease screening. Strengthening POSHAN 2.0, dietary diversification, millet-based nutrition strategies, and maternal nutrition interventions are essential for eliminating hidden hunger and improving child development outcomes. Public healthcare financing should prioritize primary healthcare infrastructure, human resource strengthening, and digital health systems instead of excessive tertiary-care dependence. India requires a comprehensive National Strategy on Ageing and Non-Communicable Diseases, integrating nutrition, urban planning, lifestyle regulation, mental health, and geriatric healthcare systems. Women’s empowerment policies must move beyond account ownership toward economic agency, digital literacy, cyber safety, and workforce participation, ensuring substantive rather than symbolic empowerment. Prelims Pointers NFHS-6 conducted during 2023–24. Nodal agency: International Institute for Population Sciences Institutional delivery: 90.6%. TFR: 2.0. Stunting: 29.3%. Full immunisation: 87.1%. Health insurance coverage: 60.2%. Women internet users: 64.3%. Exclusive breastfeeding declined from 63.7% to 55.8%, despite improvements in other nutrition indicators. Goa Statehood Day Why in News? The Prime Minister greeted citizens on Goa Statehood Day (30 May), reviving attention toward Goa’s unique political evolution involving Portuguese colonialism, military liberation, constitutional integration, linguistic identity, democratic federalism, and eventual attainment of full statehood within the Indian Union. Goa remains an extremely important UPSC topic because it connects themes of post-independence integration, anti-colonial struggles, constitutional amendments, regional identity movements, federalism, and Centre–State relations, which are frequently relevant for Prelims, GS-I, GS-II, Essay, and Interview. Relevance GS-I: Post-independence consolidation, regionalism, linguistic identity, decolonisation. GS-II: Federalism, constitutional amendments, Centre–State relations. Practice Question Q1.Goa’s integration into the Indian Union represents both a decolonisation process and a test of India’s democratic federalism. Analyse. (250 words) Historical Background of Portuguese Rule Goa, Daman and Diu remained under Portuguese control for nearly 451 years beginning in 1510, making Portuguese colonialism one of the longest European occupations in Asia and fundamentally shaping Goa’s administrative, cultural, religious, and legal systems. Portuguese rule began after the conquest of Goa by Afonso de Albuquerque, who transformed Goa into the capital of the Portuguese Estado da Índia and a major maritime-commercial centre connecting Europe, Africa, and Asia through Indian Ocean trade routes. The Portuguese administration pursued policies of religious conversion, Lusitanisation, and cultural assimilation, producing a distinct Indo-Portuguese civilisational identity visible in Goa’s architecture, cuisine, language influences, legal traditions, and social structure even today. After India attained independence in 1947, Portugal refused to transfer Goa, arguing that Goa was not a colony but an overseas province of Portugal under dictator Antonio Salazar’s authoritarian Estado Novo regime. Goa Liberation Movement Nature of the Struggle The Goa Liberation Movement combined elements of civil resistance, nationalist mobilisation, underground revolutionary activism, diplomatic pressure, and armed intervention, making it different from the integration of princely states like Hyderabad or Junagadh. Goa’s struggle was essentially a process of decolonisation, where independent India sought removal of a European colonial power from Indian territory to complete the unfinished agenda of national liberation and territorial sovereignty. Role of Nationalist Leaders Ram Manohar Lohia played a transformative role by launching civil disobedience movements in Goa during 1946, breaking Portuguese-imposed political silence and inspiring mass participation against colonial repression. Organisations such as: Azad Gomantak Dal Goa National Congress United Front of Goans mobilised resistance against Portuguese rule through protests, underground networks, and nationalist campaigns demanding integration with India. Portuguese authorities responded with severe repression involving censorship, arrests, torture, and restrictions on civil liberties, revealing the authoritarian and anti-democratic character of colonial administration in Goa. Operation Vijay (1961) Immediate Context Portugal repeatedly rejected India’s diplomatic appeals for peaceful transfer of Goa and continued military provocations, despite growing global support for decolonisation following the Second World War and United Nations anti-colonial resolutions. Domestic political pressure within India intensified because many citizens viewed continued Portuguese occupation as a direct challenge to India’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, and anti-colonial national identity. Military Intervention On 18 December 1961, India launched Operation Vijay, involving coordinated military action by the Indian Army, Navy, and Air Force to liberate Goa, Daman, and Diu from Portuguese colonial administration. Portuguese resistance collapsed within approximately 36 hours, and Governor-General Manuel António Vassalo e Silva formally surrendered to Indian forces on 19 December 1961, ending centuries of Portuguese colonial rule in India. Goa’s liberation represented the final major step in India’s territorial decolonisation process and reinforced India’s position that colonial occupation had no legitimacy in postcolonial international politics. Constitutional Integration of Goa 12th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1962 Constitutional Importance The 12th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1962 formally integrated Goa, Daman and Diu into the Indian Union as a Union Territory after Portuguese withdrawal and military liberation. The amendment inserted Goa, Daman and Diu into the First Schedule of the Constitution, thereby extending India’s constitutional sovereignty, parliamentary jurisdiction, and administrative authority over these territories. The amendment also modified Article 240, empowering the President to make regulations for the peace, progress, and good governance of the Union Territory until stable democratic institutions evolved. Administration as Union Territory Goa initially remained a Union Territory because policymakers believed the region required gradual administrative transition due to its unique colonial legal structure, linguistic complexity, and strategic maritime significance. During this period, India integrated Goa into: Parliamentary democracy Electoral governance Judicial institutions Federal administrative systems while carefully preserving aspects of Goa’s unique socio-cultural identity. Goa’s integration demonstrated India’s flexible federal approach, where political accommodation and gradual constitutional adaptation were preferred over immediate administrative homogenisation. Statehood Movement Rise of Statehood Demand During the 1970s and 1980s, demands for statehood intensified because many Goans believed Union Territory status inadequately protected Goa’s linguistic, cultural, and political identity. Regional movements argued that Goa possessed a unique civilisational character shaped by centuries of Portuguese influence, Konkani linguistic traditions, and distinct socio-cultural practices deserving constitutional recognition through statehood. The movement also reflected concerns regarding: Administrative autonomy Resource control Cultural preservation Political representation within India’s evolving federal framework. 56th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1987 Constitutional Significance The 56th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1987 granted full statehood to Goa, making it India’s 25th state, while Daman and Diu continued separately as a Union Territory. The amendment inserted Article 371-I into the Constitution, creating special provisions relating to Goa’s legislative assembly composition and institutional arrangements. Goa officially attained statehood on 30 May 1987, which is celebrated annually as Goa Statehood Day, symbolising democratic recognition of Goa’s separate identity within the Indian federal system. Article 371-I: Special Provision for Goa Article 371-I empowers Parliament to determine the minimum strength of Goa’s Legislative Assembly, ensuring administrative stability and functional governance despite Goa’s relatively small geographical and demographic size. Unlike several northeastern provisions under Article 371, Goa’s special provision does not grant extensive autonomy but symbolically acknowledges Goa’s distinctive historical and constitutional trajectory. The article reflects India’s willingness to constitutionally accommodate regional uniqueness while maintaining broader national unity and federal coherence. Linguistic & Cultural Identity The Official Language Act, 1987 recognised Konkani in Devanagari script as Goa’s official language, strengthening cultural identity and protecting regional linguistic heritage against assimilation pressures. Later, the 71st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 included Konkani in the Eighth Schedule, providing constitutional recognition and institutional support for the language’s preservation and promotion. Goa’s experience demonstrated how India balanced: National integration Linguistic pluralism Regional identity Democratic accommodation without weakening constitutional unity. Unique Features of Goa’s Integration Goa represents the only major instance where independent India used full-scale military action against a European colonial power to complete national territorial integration after independence. Unlike Hyderabad or Junagadh, Goa’s integration was fundamentally linked to decolonisation and anti-imperialism, rather than princely accession or partition-related territorial disputes. Goa uniquely retained elements of the Portuguese Civil Code, making it central to contemporary debates regarding the Uniform Civil Code, personal laws, and legal pluralism in India. Governance & Federalism Dimensions Goa’s integration highlighted the flexibility of Indian federalism in accommodating: Colonial legacies Linguistic diversity Regional aspirations Special constitutional arrangements within a democratic constitutional framework. The Goa model strengthened India’s nation-building philosophy based on: Democratic legitimacy Electoral participation Constitutional negotiation rather than rigid political centralisation. The peaceful functioning of Goa within India demonstrated that constitutional pluralism can strengthen rather than weaken national unity and territorial cohesion. Strategic & Geopolitical Importance Goa’s liberation enhanced India’s maritime security position along the western coast and strengthened strategic control over the Arabian Sea during the Cold War geopolitical environment. The liberation improved India’s standing among newly independent Asian and African nations by reinforcing India’s image as a committed anti-colonial and sovereignty-supporting state. Goa’s strategic ports and coastal location also contributed significantly to India’s maritime trade, naval positioning, and western coastal economic development. Contemporary Relevance Goa remains highly relevant in discussions relating to: Cooperative federalism Tourism governance Coastal ecology Heritage conservation Uniform Civil Code debates Sustainable development policies. Goa’s Indo-Portuguese heritage demonstrates India’s ability to absorb diverse historical experiences within a broader plural constitutional and civilisational framework. Rapid tourism-led growth has transformed Goa into an important case study concerning balancing economic development with environmental sustainability and local cultural preservation. Challenges After Integration Tourism-driven urbanisation has generated pressures on: Coastal ecosystems Water availability Waste management Traditional livelihoods thereby creating sustainability concerns for Goa’s long-term development model. Mining-related environmental degradation and land conflicts have intensified debates regarding balancing economic growth with ecological conservation and community rights. Periodic concerns arise regarding demographic changes, cultural commodification, and erosion of indigenous Goan identity due to large-scale tourism and migration-related pressures. Prelims Pointers Operation Vijay launched on 18 December 1961. Goa liberated on 19 December 1961. 12th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1962 integrated Goa into India. Goa Opinion Poll (1967) rejected merger with Maharashtra. 56th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1987 granted Goa statehood. Article 371-I contains special provisions for Goa. 71st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 added Konkani to the Eighth Schedule. Goa became India’s 25th state on 30 May 1987.