Volume 160, Issue 2 pp. 437-446
CLINICAL ARTICLE

Climate change vulnerability, and health of women and children: Evidence from India using district level data

Bidhubhusan Mahapatra

Corresponding Author

Bidhubhusan Mahapatra

Norwegian Refugee Council, Amman, Jordan

Correspondence

Bidhubhusan Mahapatra, Population Council, Zone 5A, India Habitat Centre, Lodhi Road, New Delhi 110003, India.

Email: [email protected]; [email protected]

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Trisha Chaudhuri

Trisha Chaudhuri

Population Council, New Delhi, India

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Niranjan Saggurti

Niranjan Saggurti

Population Council, New Delhi, India

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First published: 18 October 2022

Abstract

Objective

To understand how climate change vulnerability is associated with women and children's health (WCH) at the district level in India.

Methods

The district-specific climate change vulnerability index was mapped to the district level NFHS-5 data (N = 674). Fractional regression and spatial analyses were performed to examine the strength of association and the presence of geographic clustering.

Results

Bivariate analysis revealed that the levels of WCH indicators were lower in districts with a high vulnerability index than in those with a low vulnerability index. Multivariable analyses suggested that with a 1% increase in the vulnerability index, the proportion of modern contraceptive use was reduced by 0.22, four or more prenatal care visits by 0.14, postnatal care by 0.11, and full immunization by 0.12; whereas wasting and underweight proportions increased by 0.07 and 0.10, respectively. The spatial analysis found that in about 70–118 districts, mostly in eastern India, where climate vulnerability was high the WCH outcomes were also poor.

Conclusion

There is a macro-level association between climate change vulnerability and WCH, as districts that had high levels of climate change vulnerability also performed poorly in WCH. There is a need for an integrated approach that considers geography-specific climate change threats to develop health programs.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

The authors have no conflict of interest to declare.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

Research data are not shared.