Contact Person : Prof. A.k. Gupta, Dr. Alka Gupta, Dr. Pinki Saini; Last Date for the submission of abstract : 15-Jan-2019; Currently, women in India face a multitude of health problems, which ultimately affect the aggregate economy’s output. WHO commends India for its groundbreaking progress in recent years in reducing the Maternal Mortality Ratio MMR by 77%, from 556 per 100,000 live births in 1990 to 130 per 100,000 live births in 2016. India’s present MMR is below the Millennium Development Goal MDG target and puts the country on track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal SDG target of an MMR below 70 by 2030. Though NRHM has initiated some measures of maternal health, since enactment of NHRM in 2005, the country is still far behind most emerging economics in rural areas due to cultural, behavioral and other constraints Nutrition, Hygiene, Safe drinking water, Poverty and Living conditions, Early- Age Marriage, etc. India currently has one of the highest rates of malnourished women among the developing countries. The survey of NFHS-4 2015-16 shows that the women age between 15-49 years was found anemic, 53.1 percent urban 50.8%, rural 54.3%.Maternal malnutrition has been associated with an increased risk of maternal mortality and also child birth defects that lead to negative outcomes for women and children. Morbidity and mortality occurring in Indian women is mostly due to preventable causes. Illiteracy and poverty lead to have poor kledge and lake of awareness about preventable diseases like Heart Diseases, Breast Cancer, Reproductive Tract Cancer Ovarian and Cervical Cancer, Gynecological complications, Sexually Transmitted Diseases STDs, and Premenstrual Dysmorphic Disorder PMDD.