Missing Girls in India: Infanticide, Feticide and Made-to-Order Pregnancies? Insights from Hospital-Based Sex-Ratio-at-Birth over the Last Century
نویسندگان
چکیده
BACKGROUND There are 44 million missing women in India. Gender bias; neglect of girls, infanticides and feticides are responsible. The sex ratio at birth can be used to examine the influence of antenatal sex selection on the sex ratio. MATERIALS AND METHODS Records from 321,991 deliveries at one hospital over 11 decades were utilized. The middle year in each decade was taken as representative of the decade. Data from 33,524 deliveries were then analyzed. Data for each decade was combined with that of previous decades and compared to the data of subsequent decades to look for any change in the trend. Sex ratio in the second children against sex of the first child was studied separately. RESULTS The mean sex ratio for the 110 years examined was 910 girls to 1000 boys (95% CI; 891 to 930). The sex ratio dropped significantly from 935 (CI: 905 to 967) before 1979, to 892 (CI: 868 to 918) after 1980 (P = 0.04). The sex ratio in the second child was significantly lower if the first child was a girl [716 (CI: 672 to 762] (P<0.001). On the other hand, there was an excess of girls born to mothers whose first child was boy [1140 girls per 1000 boys (CI: 1072 to 1212 P<0.001)]. CONCLUSIONS The sex ratio fell significantly after 1980 when ultra sound machines for antenatal sex determination became available. The sex ratio in second children if the first was a girl was even lower. Sex selective abortions after antenatal sex determination are thus implicated. However data on second children especially the excess of girls born to mothers who have a previous boy seen in the decade before the advent of antenatal ultra sound machines, suggests that other means of sex selection are also used.
منابع مشابه
Son Preference in India: Implications for Gender Development
Using data from the Census of India and the National Family Health Survey (NFHS), this paper analyzes trends in child sex ratios (0-6 years of age) and the increase in son preference in India. Latest census data (2011) shows that the child sex ratios (females per 1,000 males) have decreased compared to data from the last five decades. Increasing son preference and neglect of daughters is occurr...
متن کاملSex preferences among mothers delivering at Patan Hospital.
BACKGROUND High sex ratios at birth (SRB) are seen in China, Taiwan, South Korea, parts of India and Vietnam. The imbalance is the result of son preference, accentuated by declining fertility. Prenatal sex determination and female feticides are common in many countries. It is reflected in sex ratio OBJECTIVE To determine reasons for the preferences for different sex; to find out whether there...
متن کاملThe completion of the human genome nucleotide sequence raises privacy concerns.
Editor – While we were pondering over the widening gap between the numbers of girls and boys in our newborn unit, we came across the thought-provoking article of R. Hussain et al. (1). The ‘‘gender gap’’ is gradually increasing inmany developing countries, and India is no exception. In India, over the last fifty years, the number of females per thousand males has gone down from 1053 to 972 (2);...
متن کاملTheRelationshipof Family SizeandComposition ToFertilityDesires,ContraceptiveAdoptionand MethodChoice in SouthAsia
Volume 35,Number 1,March 2009 A strong cultural preference for sons exists in many countries in East and South Asia.1,2 Sons are more prized than daughters in these countries for a variety of social and economic reasons, including their financial and labor contributions to the family, their ability to support their parents and their perpetuation of the family name.3 In some countries, especiall...
متن کاملSon Preference, Sex Selection and Gender Inequality in India
In the backdrop of the debate on missing women (Oster, 2005), this paper empirically tests for two competing explanations of the increasing sex ratio at birth (SRB) in India: prevalence of hepatitis B and human intervention in the form of sex selective abortion or female infanticide. Estimating a simple model of male-preferring stopping rule using the method of maximum likelihood with data from...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- PLoS ONE
دوره 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2008