Explainer: NFHS-6 Data Sheets and the Missing Indicators

UPHCS. Pic: Deepak Rajanikanth

The National Family Health Survey (NFHS) is a large-scale, national household survey conducted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. The survey is conducted roughly every three years, and covers population, health, nutrition, and emerging health issues at the national, state, and district level.

The first round was conducted in 1992–93, with each round tracking a set of measurable health and demographic markers called indicators that allow researchers and policymakers to compare progress over time.

In 2023–24, India conducted the sixth round of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-6). For the first time, all aspects of the survey were coordinated solely by IIPS, Mumbai. The fact sheets were released on May 29, 2026. The NFHS-6 fact sheet tracks 101 key indicators across health, nutrition, and demographic parameters.

Graphic: Mandanna K | Source: NFHS-6 fact sheet, MoHFW (2026)

Compared to NFHS-5 (2019–21), which carried 131 indicators, the NFHS-6 fact sheet contains 30 fewer, with 13 new indicators added. The dropped indicators span several categories:

  • All three child and infant mortality rates (IMR, NNMR, U5MR),
  • All seven anaemia breakdowns across children, women, and men,
  • The entire cancer screening section,
  • All four HIV/AIDS awareness indicators,
  • Method-level family planning data (pill, condom, IUD, injectables),
  • sanitation and clean cooking fuel coverage, sex ratio figures, and literacy rates.

The government has said the fact sheets represent only the first stage of data dissemination, and that a fuller national report with additional indicators and methodological detail will follow (Times of India). 

# Indicators from NFHS-5 that were dropped in NFHS-6 Category
1Sex ratio of the total populationDemographics
2Sex ratio at birthDemographics
3Children under age 5 whose birth was registered with civil authority (%)Demographics
4Deaths in the last 3 years registered with civil authority (%)Demographics
5Women who are literate (%)Demographics
6Men who are literate (%)Demographics
7Population living in households using improved sanitation facility (%)Household
8Households using clean fuel for cooking (%)Household
9Adolescent fertility rate for women age 15-19 yearsMarriage & Fertility
10Neonatal mortality rate (NNMR)Mortality
11Infant mortality rate (IMR)Mortality
12Under-five mortality rate (U5MR)Mortality
13IUD/PPIUD (%)Family Planning
14Pill (%)Family Planning
15Condom (%)Family Planning
16Injectables (%)Family Planning
17Health worker ever talked to female non-users about family planning (%)Family Planning
18Current users ever told about side effects of family planning method (%)Family Planning
19Average out-of-pocket expenditure per delivery in public health facility (Rs.)Maternal Health
20Home births conducted by skilled health personnel (%)Delivery Care
21Children with diarrhoea who received oral rehydration salts (ORS) (%)Child Health
22Children with diarrhoea who received zinc (%)Child Health
23Children with diarrhoea taken to health facility or health provider (%)Child Health
24Children age 12-23 months who have received 3 doses of penta or DPT vaccine (%)Vaccination
25Children age 12-23 months who have received 3 doses of penta or hepatitis B vaccine (%)Vaccination
26Women with high risk waist-to-hip ratio (%)Nutrition
27Men with high risk waist-to-hip ratio (%)Nutrition
28Children age 6-59 months who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
29Non-pregnant women age 15-49 who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
30Pregnant women age 15-49 who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
31All women age 15-49 who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
32All women age 15-19 who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
33Men age 15-49 who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
34Men age 15-19 who are anaemic (%)Anaemia
35Women who have ever had a cervical cancer screening test (%)Cancer Screening
36Women who have ever had a breast examination for breast cancer (%)Cancer Screening
37Women who have ever had an oral cavity examination (%)Cancer Screening
38Men who have ever had an oral cavity examination (%)Cancer Screening
39Women who have comprehensive knowledge of HIV/AIDS (%)HIV/AIDS
40Men who have comprehensive knowledge of HIV/AIDS (%)HIV/AIDS
41Women who know consistent condom use reduces HIV risk (%)HIV/AIDS
42Men who know consistent condom use reduces HIV risk (%)HIV/AIDS