Researchers from Rutgers School of Public Health, New York University and Columbia University in the US found that between 2004 and 2013 amenable mortality increased by about 25 per cent in Delhi.
Compared to similar large middle-income nations, India has failed to achieve minimal sanitation and public health standards, resulting in a climbing rate of amenable mortality - premature deaths due to causes which are treatable.
Delhi's rates of amenable mortality were compared against those of Moscow, Sao Paulo and Shanghai, mega cities in similar large, middle-income countries with booming economies that likewise have been striving toward a goal of universal health coverage.
The researchers found that between 2004 and 2013 - when the economy of India was growing rapidly - amenable mortality increased by about 25 per cent in Delhi, while the comparison cities experienced a decrease in amenable mortality of at least 25 per cent.
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Though a part of the country's wealthiest territory, half of Delhi's 16 million inhabitants live in slums and other substandard housing, researchers said.
With more than half of India's households lacking toilets and more than 200 million people with no access to safe drinking water, the World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that 900,000 Indians die annually from drinking contaminated water and breathing polluted air, researchers said.
Using data that could be routinely and reliably monitored over time to assess amenable mortality - population estimates and vital statistics, including medically certified death records and hospital records for people ages one to 69 - the researchers found a disparity in care.
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