Karnataka, having a total population of 52,850,562, is one of the major states in South India. Kannada is the official language of Karnataka[1] and is spoken as a native language of the people. Other linguistic minorities in the state as of 1991 are Urdu, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Malayalam, Tulu, Konkani and Hindi.[2] Karnataka is also in the forefront of population control measures with the world's first two birth control clinics being set up in 1930 in the Mandya district.[3]
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According to the 2001 census of India, the total population of Karnataka is 52,850,562. Of this, 26,898,918 (50.9%) are male and 25,951,644 (49.1%) are female. There is a decadal increase in population of 17.3% from 1991 to 2001. Population density is 275.6 per km², the sex ratio is 964 females to 1000 males and 34.0% of the people in Karnataka live in urban areas. The literacy rate is 66.6% with 76% of males and 57% of females being literate.[4] As per the 2001 census, the eight largest cities of Karnataka in order of their population are Bangalore, Hubli-Dharwad, Mysore, Gulbarga, Belgaum, Mangalore, Davanagere and Shimoga.[5] The state has one of the largest populations of Anglo-Indians in India. Given below is a composite table of languages and religions of Karnataka as of census 2001 languages in karnataka Kannada = 66.26%, Urdu = 10.50%, Telugu = 7.03%, Tamil = 3.55%, Tulu = 2.84%, Marathi = 3.6%, others = 6.22%.
Bangalore Urban, Belgaum and Gulbarga are the most populous districts, each of them having a population of more than three million. Gadag, Chamarajanagar and Kodagu districts have a population of less than a million.
83.9% of the population are Hindu, 12.2% are Muslim, 1.9% are Christian, 0.8% are Jains, 0.7% are Buddhist, <0.1% are Sikhs, and remaining belong to other religions.[6] Karnataka is also the location of some of tribes like, Nayaka, Soliga, and Yerava. The joint family system is prevalent in the rural areas of Karnataka and there are extreme cases like the Narasinganavars who reside in the Dharwad district and are recognised as one of the largest undivided families in the world.
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The princely state of Mysore was the first state in India to take up a vaccination drive against small pox. World's first two birth control clinics were set up in Karnataka in the district of Mandya.[3] Even though health care in Karnataka's private sector is among world's best[7], state as a whole has not been fully successful in providing effective primary health care. Apart from capital Bangalore and coastal districts of Udupi and Dakshina Kannada other parts of the state especially northern districts have not received sufficient attention by government and private sectors.[3] However Karnataka has established a modicum of public health services having a better record of health care and child care compared to other states of India.[8] The state has a birth rate of 2.2%, death rate of 0.7%, an infant mortality rate of 5.5%, a maternal mortality rate of 0.2% and 2.2 being total fertility rate.[3] As of 2004 state's Health and Family Welfare Services had 8,143 sub-centres (one for 5,000 people), 581 Primary Health Units (PHUs), 1,679 Primary Health Centres (PHCs), 19 mobile units, 7,304 maternity annexes, 17 urban PHCs and 110 Community Health Centres. While the doctor-population ratio is 1:10,260, the bed to population ratio is 1:1,220.[3] There were 87 Urban Family Welfare Centres, 124 Urban Health Centres and 24 district level and 149 taluk level hospitals. Six government hospitals in Karnataka have won ISO-9002 certification. During 2004-05 Karnataka slipped from the sixth place to the seventh in the Human Development Index. During fiscal year 2004-05, only 0.7% of total GSDP was allocated to health sector.[3]
Karnataka is one of the states of India most seriously affected by the HIV/AIDS epidemic and stands fifth on the number of reported AIDS cases in the country. The first case of AIDS was detected in the state in 1988. Of the 49 high prevalence HIV/AIDS districts in India, 10 are in Karnataka.[9] This has caused Karnataka to become the first state in India to bring in legislation making pre-marital HIV tests compulsory.[10] In 2010, the Government of Karnataka approved new state-of-the-art HIV/AIDS prevention education developed at Stanford University by U.S. nonprofit TeachAIDS, and committed to distributing them in 5,500 government schools.[11]
Karnataka is also home to Handigodu Syndrome, a rare and painful osteoarthritic disorder endemic to the Malnad region of the state.
Official Census Portal of Mysore District [1]