Jammu and Kashmir is showing results from years of steady investment in public health as improvements in maternal and child care are now visible in both statistics and daily life, with more women reaching hospitals safely, more infants surviving their first weeks, and families gaining confidence in the healthcare system. What was once fragile is gradually becoming stronger, positioning the newly carved territory among the better-performing regions in the country.
For decades, maternal and infant health carried grim realities, families in remote districts often depended on untrained birth attendants, and emergency care was accessible only to those who could reach Srinagar or Jammu in time. Ambulances were scarce, referral systems weak, and institutional deliveries rare. The consequences were high maternal mortality, preventable infant deaths, and eroded trust in public health services. Against this backdrop, the current progress marks a significant shift.
Maternal Mortality Ratio now stands at 47 per 100,000 live births, well below the national average of 88. This outcome reflects deliberate reforms: expansion of institutional delivery care, wider availability of emergency obstetric and newborn care facilities, and strengthened blood services. Referral transport systems under the National Health Mission have ensured that women in labor are no longer stranded in far‑flung villages without timely help. The sight of ambulances navigating mountain roads has become a symbol of a system finally prioritizing mothers.
Neonatal mortality has dropped to 10, compared to the national average of 19, while early neonatal mortality is at 6 against India’s 13. Infant Mortality Rate is 14, far below the national figure of 25, and the Under‑5 Mortality Rate is 15 compared to 29 nationally. These numbers represent fewer families mourning newborns and more children surviving to see their first birthdays. In districts such as Kupwara and Pulwama, where infant deaths were once accepted as inevitable, the change is evident.
Immunization has been another cornerstone as Jammu and Kashmir has achieved full coverage of 96.5 percent, among the highest in the country. This success stems from intensified routine drives, door‑to‑door campaigns, and robust monitoring mechanisms. Parents who once hesitated now bring their children to health centers, reassured by the decline in preventable diseases. The introduction of the HPV vaccine under the Universal Immunization Programme for girls aged 14–15 years adds a preventive dimension, protecting future generations from cervical cancer.
Challenges remain, as the conflict, bureaucratic hassles and harsh winters have disrupted healthcare delivery. In some areas, mistrust of government initiatives slowed adoption of new practices. Shortages of specialists and infrastructure gaps continue to test the system. Yet the spirit of frontline workers; nurses, ASHA staff, and doctors has been crucial. Their ability to reach communities in difficult terrain, often at personal risk, has ensured that reforms are not confined to policy documents but lived realities.
Looking ahead, sustaining and deepening these gains is essential. Expanding telemedicine to bridge specialist shortages, strengthening adolescent health programs, and addressing non‑communicable diseases will be critical. HPV vaccine rollout underscores the importance of preventive care. Equity must also be central; ensuring that benefits reach marginalized groups, whether in Gujjar hamlets of Poonch or snowbound villages of Gurez.
Jammu and Kashmir’s healthcare story is one of progress, not perfection. It demonstrates that even in places burdened by conflict and geography, determined governance and community participation can change outcomes. Valley, long seen through the prism of strife, now offers a quieter headline: mothers surviving childbirth, children thriving in their early years, and a society embracing the promise of health.
