Intro to Urban Disease Patterns - City Sickness Intro
- Urbanization: Population shift to cities, causing urban growth.
- Urban Area (India): Defined by Census (Statutory/Census Towns).
- Urban Health Factors:
- ↑ Density & overcrowding, pollution (air, water, noise).
- Lifestyle changes (sedentary, diet patterns).
- Social dynamics (stress, inequity, social support).
- Double Burden: Coexistence of communicable (CDs) & non-communicable (NCDs) diseases.

⭐ Census Town (India): Min. pop 5,000; ≥75% male main workers in non-agricultural pursuits; density ≥400/km².
Urban Communicable Diseases - Crowded Critters
- Prevalent Diseases:
- Tuberculosis (TB): airborne, overcrowding.
- Dengue & Chikungunya: Aedes mosquitoes.
- Diarrheal Diseases (Cholera, Typhoid): contaminated water/food.
- Acute Respiratory Infections (ARI): close contact, indoor pollution.
- Leptospirosis: rodent urine, contaminated water.
- Malaria: Anopheles stephensi (urban vector).
- Favorable Urban Factors:
- High population density, slums.
- Poor sanitation, improper waste disposal.
- Intermittent/unsafe water supply.
- Increased vector breeding sites.
⭐ Aedes aegypti, breeding in artificial water collections, is the primary Dengue vector in Indian cities.
Urban Non-Communicable Diseases - Lifestyle Afflictions
- Predominant NCDs: Hypertension, Diabetes Mellitus (DM), Cardiovascular Diseases (CVDs), common Cancers (e.g., lung, breast, colorectal), Obesity, COPD.
- Key Urban Risk Factors:
- Lifestyle: Sedentary habits, unhealthy diet (processed foods, high sugar/salt/fat).
- Stress: Chronic psychosocial stress.
- Environment: Air & noise pollution.
- Substances: Tobacco & alcohol use.

⭐ Urban areas in India report nearly double the prevalence of diabetes (~10-14%) and hypertension (~25-30%) compared to rural settings (diabetes ~5-8%, hypertension ~15-20%).
Urban Mental & Social Health - Concrete Jungle Blues
- Mental Health: ↑ Stress, anxiety, depression, substance abuse.
- Social Pathologies: ↑ Violence, crime, social isolation, accidents (e.g., road traffic).
- Drivers: Fast-paced life, competition, ↓ social support, overcrowding, pollution.
⭐ National Mental Health Survey (NMHS) 2015-16: Urban areas show higher prevalence of mood disorders (e.g., depression) & substance dependence compared to rural areas.
Vulnerable Urban Populations - Disparity Hotspots
- Key Groups: Slum dwellers, homeless, migrants, elderly, children, women.
- Health Issues: ↑ Communicable diseases (TB, diarrhea), NCDs, malnutrition, mental health, occupational hazards.
- Access Barriers: Poverty, illiteracy, social stigma, overcrowding, limited services, insecure housing.
- Health Inequity: Unequal social determinants (water, sanitation, housing) cause health outcome disparities.
⭐ In India, Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) in urban slums can be 2-3 times higher than in non-slum urban areas.
Urban Disease Control Strategies - City Shield Strategies
- Multi-sectoral Approach: Coordinated efforts across health, sanitation, housing, transport, and environment sectors.
- Key Interventions: Improved water & sanitation, solid waste management, integrated vector control, health promotion & BCC (Behavior Change Communication).
- NUHM Role: Strengthens urban primary healthcare via U-PHCs (Urban Primary Health Centres), U-CHCs (Urban Community Health Centres); community participation through Mahila Arogya Samitis & USHAs.

> ⭐ USHA (Urban Social Health Activist) is a key community link under NUHM, similar to ASHA in rural areas, facilitating access to health services for the urban poor and vulnerable populations.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Urban India faces a dual disease burden: prevalent NCDs (diabetes, HTN, CVDs) and persistent CDs (TB, dengue).
- Lifestyle factors like sedentary habits and poor diet fuel the NCD surge.
- Air pollution significantly contributes to ↑ respiratory illnesses (asthma, COPD).
- Mental health issues (stress, depression) show increased urban prevalence.
- Road Traffic Accidents (RTAs) are a major cause of urban injury and death.
- Health inequities persist, with slums vulnerable to vector-borne and water-borne diseases.
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