Published on: June 27, 2025
THIRD MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE ON CRVS (CIVIL REGISTRATION AND VITAL STATISTICS)
THIRD MINISTERIAL CONFERENCE ON CRVS (CIVIL REGISTRATION AND VITAL STATISTICS)
CONTEXT
- Held in Bangkok, Thailand by UNESCAP (United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific).
- Participating governments committed to ensuring 100% registration of births and deaths by 2030.
- Builds upon the CRVS Decade (2015–2024) launched in 2014 with the slogan “Get everyone in the picture.”
- Extended timeline to 2030 to align with Sustainable Development Goal 16.9: Legal identity for all, including birth registration.
CONCEPT: IMPORTANCE OF CRVS SYSTEMS
- Defined as the continuous, compulsory, universal recording of vital events (births, deaths, marriages, divorces, cause of death).
- Birth registration: Enables legal identity, access to healthcare, education, social protection.
- Death registration: Critical for inheritance, insurance, and public health planning.
- Helps protect vulnerable populations – prevents child marriage, trafficking, modern slavery.
- Legal identity promotes justice, governance, and inclusion.
- A well-functioning CRVS system is key to data-driven policy-making and public service delivery.
CURRENT
ASIA-PACIFIC REGION
- Unregistered children under 5 reduced from 135 million (2012) to 51 million (2022) – 60% drop.
- 29 countries have achieved >90% birth registration; 30 for death registration.
- Still, 14 million births unregistered annually; 6.9 million deaths unrecorded.
- New roadmap (till 2030) focuses on:
- Digital transformation
- Interoperable data systems
- Legal reform and inclusivity
- Gender equity and privacy safeguards
INDIA’S PROGRESS
- Civil registration under Registrar-General of India, supported by Ministry of Health.
- Birth registration rate improved from 86% to 96% over the CRVS decade.
- Digital initiatives:
- Online/offline registration software
- Central CRVS portal
- Digilocker integration for digital certificates
- Legal reforms:
- Covers orphaned, adopted, surrogate children, single-parent births
- Mandatory cause of death reporting by medical institutions
- Challenges identified:
- Lack of awareness
- Poor inter-departmental coordination
- Underreporting by registration units
