Has the delay in the 2021 Census sparked a data crisis in public health science?

Published: April 26, 2024, 12:35 p.m.

The delay in conducting the 2021 census seems to have sparked a data crisis, with major implications for the social sector, especially public health policy. This crisis, according to public health analysts, has been worsened by the government\u2019s reluctance to put certain types of data in the public domain, over concerns they might show it in an unflattering light.\nIn the context of public health, the census is important because it forms the basis for national and state health surveys. So, how are the country\u2019s policy-makers and social scientists managing with 2011 census data in 2024? What are the problems seen in the implementation of government welfare schemes such as PMJAY (Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana) due to unavailability of up-to-date data? What\u2019s the status today with regard to transparency and professional autonomy in the collection, scrutiny and publication of data that\u2019s central to the public health discourse?\nGuest: Professor T Sundararaman, a public health expert, who has served as Executive Director of National Health Systems Resource Centre and as Dean and Professor at the School of Health Systems Studies at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai.\nHost: G. Sampath, Social Affairs Editor, The Hindu.\nEdited by Jude Francis Weston