Abstract

ObjectiveSkilled birth attendance and place of delivery have a significant effect on child growth. The present paper examined the mode of delivery and its impact on child health among children 0–59 months in India.MethodsA total of 200,794 samples were used in the study. Among them, 45,784 births were delivered by C-section, and the remaining 150,010 births were delivered through normal delivery. Life table estimation of mortality, as well as bivariate and multivariate logistic regression, were used to identify the association between child health and mode of delivery using data from the fifth round of the National Family Health Survey conducted in 2019-21.ResultsThe study results indicate that children born through normal delivery had significantly lower rates of stunting, wasting, and underweight compared to those born via C-section. Additionally, the likelihood of a new-born baby dying during the neonatal period was higher for those delivered by C-section compared to those delivered vaginally, which holds true for various background characteristics. Mothers with a 3rd or higher order birth who deliver via C-section face a higher risk of their baby dying during the neonatal and infant periods compared to those with a 2nd order birth.ConclusionThe conclusion of the study found that C-section delivery may adversely affect child undernutrition as compared to normal birth. These findings would help formulate the policies and implement actions that would improve the quality of painless labor and immediate delivery in health facilities particularly public hospitals and shall reduce the C-section birth.

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