The Hindu 11.02.2014
Getting a birth or death certificate made simpler

A child’s birth certificate will now be issued at the
hospital itself, and parents can collect it before clearing the hospital
bills.
Similarly, death certificates too will reach relatives of the deceased within three days.
While
the new system of issuing birth and death certificates has been in
force since February 1, the e-transfer of data from the hospitals to the
Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) for quick issuance of the
certificates was officially launched here on Monday.
BBMP’s
Joint Director (Statistics) D. Shankarappa told presspersons here that
the civic body had introduced this system in all the 1,480 private
medical hospitals and nursing homes, BBMP’s six referral hospitals and
22 maternity homes, and five government hospitals.
“With
the new system, the certificates can be issued at the hospital itself.
Earlier, it used to take a week and in some cases, even up to a month.
With this, the BBMP has become the first corporation in the country to
have such a unique system,” he said.
NIC software
Mr. Shankarappa said the software for the system had been developed by the National Informatics Centre (NIC).
He
explained that all hospitals have been given a unique user identity and
password. The authorised hospital officials have to log in and register
the event (either birth or death).
Several measures
have been put in place to ensure that there is no misuse. He said each
certificate would be pre-printed with the emblems of the Union and State
governments, as well as the BBMP emblem as watermark. Apart from a
serial number, it would also have a 24-digit security code and a
three-dimensional high-security hologram.
Corrections
Mr.
Shankarappa said the BBMP had set up 27 registration centres across the
city. Citizens could approach these centres or the zonal offices for
inclusion of name, correction or delayed registration.
Copies
of birth and death certificates would also be available at around 90
BangaloreOne centres and BBMP’s citizen service centres.
He
clarified that when someone dies at home, the relatives would have to
produce a doctor’s certificate and the receipt from the crematorium or
burial ground to apply for a death certificate.
BBMP Commissioner M. Lakshminarayana said that with the new system, inconvenience caused to the citizens would be minimised.