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1.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-111631

ABSTRACT

Urbanisation is rapidly taking place in India. A sizeable number of people migrate to metropolitan cities to take up casual labour jobs and settle in pockets scattered all over the city. They generally pay frequent visits to their native place with a higher malarial endemicity and are believed to be important reservoirs of infection for the native population of metropolis. To investigate this problem, a survey was conducted in 1987-88 to compare the prevalence of chronic malaria in two such pockets of migrant population with that of local population of Delhi from nearby villages. Ninetyone out of 701 (12.84 per cent) immigrants investigated had fever clinically diagnosed as malaria at the time of survey, while in the native population 45 out of 646 (6.97 per cent) had such a history. The difference is statistically significant. Splenomegaly was also significantly higher in migrants (15.41 per cent) than in natives of Delhi villages (3.10 per cent). Migrant population is not covered by active surveillance and live in poor environmental conditions conducive to mosquito breeding and malaria transmission. A special attention needs to be paid to the migratory population in the anti-malaria programme in order to control the transmission of the disease in the cities.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , India/epidemiology , Infant , Malaria/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Rural Population , Sex Factors , Transients and Migrants , Urban Population
2.
Indian Pediatr ; 1989 Sep; 26(9): 894-9
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-15002

ABSTRACT

Complete retrospective fertility histories of 843 ever married women of two villages in Delhi, obtained through house to house survey, were analysed to study various marriage cohorts by decades for trends of child birth spacing over a period of 60 years from 1921 to 1980. Spacing between consummation of marriage and first child birth gradually declined over the last 6 decades. For all other subsequent livebirths remained constant at an average of nearly 30 months. Irrespective of the reasons for such a trend, much more efforts are required to be put in to increase child spacing.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Birth Intervals , Cohort Studies , Developing Countries , Female , Humans , India , Retrospective Studies , Rural Population
3.
Indian J Pediatr ; 1983 Jul-Aug; 50(405): 367-70
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-80408
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