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Infertility in India
- Infertility is emerging as a critical public health challenge in India in 2026, with experts increasingly highlighting that mental health is not just a consequence but a physiological driver of reproductive failure for all genders.
About Infertility in India:
- Infertility in India is defined as the inability of a couple to conceive after 12 months of regular, unprotected intercourse. While traditionally viewed as a woman’s issue due to deep-seated patriarchal norms, contemporary data reveals a nearly equal split in male and female factor causes.
- In 2026, the conversation has shifted toward the silent crisis of male infertility and the biological impact of psychological stress on reproductive cells (gametes).
Key Trends and Data:
- National Prevalence: Approximately 15–20% of Indian couples (nearly 30 million) currently grapple with infertility, with rates significantly higher in urban centers.
- Falling TFR: India’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) has dipped to 1.9, well below the replacement level of 2.1, driven by both voluntary delays and involuntary infertility.
- Male Factor Rise: Men now account for nearly 40–50% of infertility cases, often linked to declining sperm quality due to environmental toxins and stress.
- Urban-Rural Divide: Urban areas report higher primary infertility (never conceived), while rural areas see higher secondary infertility, often due to untreated infections.
- IVF Growth: The Indian IVF market is projected to double from million in 2024 to billion by 2029, reflecting increased seeking of medical aid.
Causes of Rising Infertility in India:
- Delayed Parenthood: Career prioritization and financial stability goals are pushing the average age of first-time parents beyond the biological prime.
- E.g. Data from urban hubs like Bengaluru and Mumbai show a 25% increase in women seeking fertility treatments after the age of 35 in 2025-26.
- Environmental Pollution: High levels of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs) in air and water are sabotaging hormonal health.
- E.g. Studies in Delhi have linked Poor air quality days to transient drops in sperm motility among healthy young males.
- Lifestyle-Related Disorders: Obesity and PCOS (Polycystic Ovary Syndrome) have become epidemic due to sedentary routines and processed diets.
- E.g. One in five Indian women is estimated to suffer from PCOS in 2026, a leading cause of anovulatory infertility.
- Chronic Psychological Stress: High cortisol levels from workplace pressure directly inhibit the HPA axis, disrupting ovulation and spermatogenesis.
- E.g. Research published in Frontiers in Endocrinology (2024) confirmed that depression in Indian men is significantly associated with decreased semen concentration.
- Untreated Reproductive Infections: In rural areas, the stigma around STIs and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) leads to tubal blockages.
- E.g. Cases of tubal factor infertility in states like Bihar are frequently traced back to untreated post-partum infections or tuberculosis.
Challenges Associated with Infertility:
- Social Stigma and Ostracization: Women are often branded with pejorative terms and excluded from social/religious gatherings if they fail to conceive.
- E.g. In several rural clusters in Tamil Nadu, the term ‘Maladi’ is still used to socially isolate women, leading to severe identity fragmentation.
- Prohibitive Treatment Costs: IVF and ART procedures remain catastrophic expenses for the middle and lower classes.
- E.g. An average IVF cycle in 2026 costs between ₹1.5–3 lakh, while over 90% of Indian insurance policies still exclude infertility coverage.
- The Silence of Male Infertility: Patriarchal norms prevent men from seeking semen analysis, often leading to unnecessary and invasive testing for their wives.
- E.g. Clinical reviews in 2025 noted that men often wait 3-5 years longer than women to undergo their first fertility screening due to masculinity concerns.
- Psychological Feedback Loops: The stress of failing to conceive becomes a biological impediment, creating a cycle where stress prevents the very pregnancy being sought.
- E.g. The monthly cycle of hope and grief in IVF patients has been linked to elevated salivary alpha-amylase, which reduces the probability of implantation.
- Regulatory Gaps in Tier II/III Cities: Rapidly mushrooming clinics in smaller towns often lack standardized protocols or transparent success rates.
- E.g. Under the 2025 ART guidelines, several basement clinics in North India were shut down for misleading advertisements and donor exploitation.
Initiatives Taken by the Government:
- ART and Surrogacy (Regulation) Acts: Stringent 2025 guidelines mandate the registration of all clinics and protect donors from exploitation (e.g., limiting egg donation to once in a lifetime).
- Budget 2026 Health Focus: The 2026 Union Budget proposed NIMHANS-2 and the upgrade of regional mental health institutes to address the psychological toll of chronic conditions like infertility.
- Project Sanjivini: A collaborative pilot between the Indian Fertility Society and the government to disseminate reproductive health knowledge at the grassroots level in 5 states.
- National Registry: The establishment of a digital registry to track ART outcomes, ensuring clinics provide transparent and honest success rates to patients.
Way Ahead:
- Integrating Mental Health: Counseling should be a mandatory, non-optional component of every IVF cycle to manage the emotional rollercoaster of treatment.
- Insurance Inclusion: The IRDAI should mandate at least partial coverage for infertility under standard health insurance to prevent financial ruin.
- Workplace Sensitivity: Corporates should adopt Fertility Leave policies and insurance support for egg freezing to accommodate delayed parenthood.
- Male-Centric Campaigns: Public health messaging must de-stigmatize male factor infertility to ensure both partners are tested simultaneously from the start.
- Community Education: Utilizing ASHA workers to educate rural populations that infertility is a medical condition, not a moral failure or a curse.
Conclusion:
- Infertility in 2026 is no longer just a biological hurdle but a profound social and psychological crisis that demands a gender-neutral approach. By bridging the gap between advanced reproductive science and empathetic social narratives, India can transform fertility care into a journey of dignity rather than one of quiet suffering. True healing will only occur when we treat the mind with the same urgency as the body.
UPSC Prelims [PYQ 2024]
1. The total fertility rate in an economy is defined as:
- the number of children born per 1000 people in the population in a year.
- the number of children born to a couple in their lifetime in a given population.
- the birth rate minus death rate.
- the average number of live births a woman would have by the end of her child-bearing age.
Ans: 1 – (d) is the correct answer.
The Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is the average number of children who would be born to any women in her lifetime. It is the average number of children a women would have at the end of their reproductive period if they were subject during their whole lives to the fertility rates of a given period and if they were not subject to mortality.
UPSC Prelims [PYQ 2024]
2. Consider the following countries:
- Italy
- Japan
- Nigeria
- South Korea
- South Africa
Which of the above countries are frequently mentioned in the media for their low birth rates, or ageing population or declining population?
- 1, 2 and 4
- 1, 3 and 5
- 2 and 4 only
- 3 and 5 only
Ans: 2 – (a) is the correct answer.
- Option 1 is correct: Births in Italy dropped to a new historic low below 400,000 in 2022, as per the national statistics bureau as the population continued to shrink. Last year Italy recorded more than 12 deaths for every seven births and the resident population fell by 179,000 to 58.85 million, ISTAT said in its annual demographic report
- Option 2 is correct: The number of babies born in Japan fell for an eighth straight year to a fresh record low in 2023, preliminary government data showed on Tuesday, underscoring the daunting task the country faces in trying to stem depopulation.
- The number of births fell 5.1% from a year earlier to 758,631, while the number of marriages slid 5.9% to 489,281 — the first time in 90 years the number fell below 500,000 — foreboding a further decline in the population as out-of-wedlock births are rare in Japan
- Option 3 is incorrect: Nigeria is not facing the low population problem. On the contrary, Nigeria’s population is projected to grow from more than 186 million people in 2016 to 392 million in 2050, becoming the world’s fourth most populous country.
- Option 4 is correct: South Korea’s fertility rate, already the world’s lowest, continued its dramatic decline in 2023, as women concerned about their career advancement and the financial cost of raising children decided to delay childbirth or to not have babies.
- The average number of expected babies for a South Korean woman during her reproductive life fell to a record low of 0.72 from 0.78 in 2022, data from Statistics Korea showed
- Option 5 is incorrect: The population of South Africa will increase from 59 million in 2020 to 66 million in 2030 and 80 million in 2080.
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