Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/india

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Malnutrition in India

none


Summary

none

Despite India's 50% increase in GDP since 2013, more than one-third of the world's malnourished children live in India. Among these, half of the children under three years old are underweight.

One of the major causes for malnutrition in India is economic inequality. Due to the low economic status of some parts of the population, their diet often lacks in both quality and quantity. Women who are malnourished are less likely to have healthy babies. Nutrition deficiencies inflict long-term damage to both individuals and society. Compared with their better-fed peers, nutrition-deficient individuals are more likely to have infectious diseases such as pneumonia and tuberculosis, which lead to a higher mortality rate. Besides, nutrition-deficient individuals are less productive at work. Low productivity not only gives them low pay that traps them in a vicious circle of under-nutrition, but also brings inefficiency to the society, especially in India where labor is a major input factor for economic production. On the other hand, over-nutrition also has severe consequences. In India national obesity rates in 2010 were 14% for women and 18% for men with some urban areas having rates as high as 40%. Obesity causes several non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancers and chronic respiratory diseases.

Causes

The World Bank estimates that India is one of the highest-ranking countries in the world for the number of children with malnutrition. The prevalence of underweight children in India is among the highest in the world and is nearly double that of Sub Saharan Africa with dire consequences for mobility, mortality, productivity, and economic growth.

The 2017 Global Hunger Index (GHI) Report by International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) ranked India 100th out of 118 countries with a serious hunger situation. Amongst South Asian nations, it ranks third behind only Afghanistan and Pakistan with a GHI score of 29.0 ("serious situation"). The 2019 Global Hunger Index (GHI) report ranked India 102nd out of 117 countries with a serious issue of child wasting. At least one in five children under the age of five years in India is wasted.

India is one of the fastest growing countries in terms of population and economics, sitting at a population of 1.365 billion and growing at 1.5–1.7% annually (from 2001 to 2007). Though more than a quarter of the population is still living below the National Poverty Line its economic growth indicates new opportunities and a movement towards increase in the prevalence of chronic diseases which is observed in at high rates in developed countries such as United States, Canada and Australia. The combination of people living in poverty and the recent economic growth of India has led to the co-emergence of two types of malnutrition: undernutrition and overnutrition.

On the GHI, India is on place 67 among the 80 nations having the worst hunger situation which is worse than nations such as North Korea or Sudan. 25% of all hungry people worldwide live in India. Since 1990 there have been some improvements for children but the proportion of hungry in the population has increased. In India 44% of children under the age of 5 are underweight. 72% of infants and 52% of married women have anemia. Research has conclusively shown that malnutrition during pregnancy causes the child to have an increased risk of future diseases, physical retardation, and reduced cognitive abilities.

An estimated 23.6% of the population of India live below a purchasing power of $1.25 a day. This poverty does not directly lead to malnutrition but it leaves a large chunk of the population without adequate amounts of food. This makes a lack of access to food since people are too poor to go out and purchase it. According to the Registrar General of India, the mortality of children under the age of five was about 59 out of every 1000 live births which is one of the highest rates in the world. It is reported by Save the Children that this is mainly due to malnutrition in the children. Poor nutrition within the first thousand days of a child's life can have many negative causes to them. It can lead to stunted growth, impaired cognitive ability, reduced school performance, and diseases like diarrhea. According to a report, 68% of deaths in children under 5 years of age, in India, is due to malnutrition.

An IIT Delhi study found a link between anemia in children under the age of 5 and PM2.5 levels in air, with every 10 μg per cubic meter increase in PM2.5 levels being linked to a decrease in hemoglobin levels by 0.07 g/dL. A study published in Nature Sustainability says that long term exposure to high PM2.5 levels may be a cause of anemia among women, with their model showing a 7.23% increase in anemia among women of reproductive age for every 10 μg per cubic meter increase in PM2.5 exposure. The same study posits that India fulfilling its clean air targets would reduce the nationwide prevalence of anemia among women of reproductive age from 53% to 39.5%.

Management

The Government of India has launched several programs to converge the growing rate of nutritious children. They include Integrated Child Development Services, the National Children's Fund (a program administered by the National Institute of Public Cooperation and Child Development), and the National Health Mission. To manage nutrition requirements especially following the COVID-19 pandemic, experts have recommended ways in which India can work towards nutrition security. These include setting up community kitchens, adding pulses and millets to the Public distribution system and continuing the school Midday Meal Scheme.

Midday meal scheme in Indian schools

Main article: Midday Meal Scheme

The Indian government started the midday meal scheme on 15 August 1995. It serves millions of children with freshly cooked meals in almost all the government-run schools or schools aided by the government fund.

Apart from this, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness's (ISKCON) ISKCON Food Relief Foundation, the Nalabothu Foundation, and the Akshaya Patra Foundation run the world's largest NGO-run midday meal programs, each serving freshly cooked plant-based meals to over 1.3 million school children in government and government-aided schools in India. These programs are conducted with part subsidies from the government and partly with donations from individuals and corporations. The meals served by Food for Life Annamrita and Akshaya Patra comply with the nutritional norms given by the government of India and aims to eradicate malnutrition among children in India. Food for Life Annamrita (FFLA) is the premier affiliate of Food for Life Global, the world's largest free food relief network, with projects in over 60 countries.

Integrated child development scheme

The government of India started a program called Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) in 1975. ICDS has been instrumental in improving the health of mothers and children under age 6 by providing health and nutrition education, health services, supplementary food, and pre-school education. ICDS is run by India's central government via the Ministry of Women and Child Development, targeting rural, urban, and tribal populations and has reached over 70 million young children and 16 million pregnant and lactating mothers.

Other programs impacting under-nutrition include the National Midday Meal Scheme, the National Rural Health Mission, and the Public Distribution System (PDS). The challenge for these programs and schemes is how to increase efficiency, impact, and coverage.

Bal Kuposhan Mukta Bihar (BKMB) is a campaign launched by the Department of Social Welfare, Government of Bihar in 2014.

The campaign is based on five "C":

  • Communication for behavior change
  • Capacity building
  • Community's access to tangibles and intangibles
  • Community participation and
  • Collective approach.

The multi-pronged strategy shows that a health issue like malnutrition can be tackled with the help of behaviour change communication (BCC) and other social aspects.

National Children's Fund

The National Children's Fund was created during the International Year of the Child in 1979 under the Charitable Endowment Fund Act, 1890. This Fund provides support to voluntary organizations that help the welfare of kids.

National Plan of Action for Children

India is a signatory to the 27 survival and development goals laid down by the World Summit on children 1990. To implement these goals, the Department of Women & Child Development has formulated a National Plan of Action on Children. Each concerned Central Ministries/Departments, State Governments/U.Ts. and Voluntary Organisations dealing with women and children have been asked to take up appropriate measures to implement the Action Plan. These goals have been integrated into National Development Plans. A Monitoring Committee under the Chairpersonship of Secretary (Women & Child Development) reviews the achievement of goals set in the National Plan of Action. All concerned Central Ministries/Departments are represented on the committee.

Fifteen State Governments have prepared State Plan of Action on the lines of National Plan of Action specifying targets for 1995 as well as for 2000 and spelling out strategies for holistic child development.

United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund

Department of Women and Child Development is the nodal department for UNICEF. India is associated with UNICEF since 1949 and is now in the fifth decade of cooperation for assisting most disadvantaged children and their mothers. Traditionally, UNICEF has been supporting India in several sectors like child development, women's development, urban basic services, support for community-based convergent services, health, education, nutrition, water & sanitation, disabled children, children in especially difficult circumstances, information and communication, planning and program support. India was a member of the UNICEF Executive Board until 31 December 1997. The board has three regular sessions and one annual session in a year. Strategies and other important matters relating to UNICEF are discussed in those meetings. A meeting of Government of India and UNICEF officials concurred on 12 November 1997 to finalize the strategy and areas for the program of cooperation for the next Master Plan of operations 1999–2002 which is to synchronize with the Ninth Plan of Government of India.

Combating malnutrition with strategy

A Mangalorean doctor Edmond Fernandes piloted a project curated through the Edward & Cynthia Institute of Public Health in collaboration with Women and Child Minister of Karnataka Halappa Achar from the BJP and demonstrated proof of concept to End Malnutrition burden in India.

National Health Mission

National Rural Health Mission

The National Rural Health Mission of India mission was created for the years 2005–2012, and its goal is to "improve the availability of and access to quality health care by people, especially for those residing in rural areas, the poor, women, and children."

The subset of goals under this mission is:

  1. Reduce infant mortality rate (IMR) and maternal mortality ratio (MMR), Neonatal mortality rate (NMR)
  2. Provide universal access to public health services
  3. Prevent and control both communicable and non-communicable diseases, including locally endemic diseases
  4. Provide access to integrated comprehensive primary healthcare
  5. Create population stabilization, as well as gender and demographic balance
  6. Revitalize local health traditions and mainstream AYUSH
  7. Finally, to promote healthy lifestyles

The mission has set up strategies and action plan to meet all of its goals.

Notes

References

References

  1. (31 March 2011). "The Indian exception". The Economist.
  2. "Turning the tide of malnutrition". World Health Organization.
  3. "A call for reform and action". The World Bank.
  4. (12 November 2010). "India in grip of obesity epidemic". [[The Times of India]].
  5. "2015 Global Hunger Index Report". [[International Food Policy Research Institute]] (IFPRI).
  6. "World Development Indicators - Google Public Data Explorer".
  7. "World Bank Report". Source: The World Bank 2009.
  8. "State-Wise Percentage of Population Below Poverty Line by Social Groups, 2004–05".
  9. (2004). "Journal of the American Medical Association". JAMA.
  10. (15 January 2012). "Superpower? 230 million Indians go hungry daily".
  11. "Causes of Hunger in India".
  12. "Why India remains malnourished".
  13. Singh, Abhishek. (2020-03-02). "Childhood Malnutrition in India". Perspective of Recent Advances in Acute Diarrhea.
  14. (2019-10-25). "68 Per Cent Of Child Deaths Under Five Years In India Caused By Malnutrition In 2017: Study News".
  15. (2021-01-27). "Exposure to PM 2.5 raises anaemia risk in kids under 5: IIT-Delhi study".
  16. (2022-08-25). "Reducing the burden of anaemia in Indian women of reproductive age with clean-air targets". Nature Sustainability.
  17. "NFHS-3 Nutritional Status of Adults".
  18. Kanjilal, B. (2010). "Nutritional Status of Children in India: Household Socio-Economic Condition as the Contextual Determinant". International Journal for Equity in Health.
  19. Gulati, A., Ganesh-Kumar, A., Shreedhar, G., & Nandakumar, T. (2012). Agriculture and malnutrition in India. Food And Nutrition Bulletin, 33(1), 74–86
  20. "HUNGaMA Survey Report". Naandi foundation.
  21. Kanjilal, Barun. (January 2010). "Nutritional status of children in India: household socio-economic condition as the contextual determinant". International Journal for Equity in Health.
  22. "NFHS-3 Nutritional Status of Children".
  23. Meenakshi, J. V.. (2016-11-01). "Trends and patterns in the triple burden of malnutrition in India". Agricultural Economics.
  24. (June 2016). "Toward Food Policy for the Dual Burden of Malnutrition: An Exploratory Policy Space Analysis in India". Food and Nutrition Bulletin.
  25. (2017). "Double Burden of Malnutrition". International Journal of Health Services.
  26. "National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5)".
  27. (2022). "National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5), 2019-21". [[Ministry of Health and Family Welfare]], Government of India.
  28. (2008-05-15). "Domestic Violence and Chronic Malnutrition among Women and Children in India". American Journal of Epidemiology.
  29. (2011-05-01). "Impacts of domestic violence on child growth and nutrition: A conceptual review of the pathways of influence". Social Science & Medicine.
  30. (2008-04-22). "Domestic violence associated with chronic malnutrition in women and children in India". News.
  31. (January 2015). "Effect of physical intimate partner violence on body mass index in low-income adult women". Cadernos de Saúde Pública.
  32. Singh, Abhishek. (2020-05-06). "Childhood Malnutrition in India". IntechOpen.
  33. "Child malnutrition in India: A systemic failure".
  34. "ICDS".
  35. "National health mission".
  36. Jayashree, R. Gopinath & B.. (27 May 2020). "Beyond food rations: Six ways India can ensure nutrition security for its most vulnerable people".
  37. (3 November 2021). "FFL Home - Food Yoga International".
  38. (2016-07-01). "Political economy of child nutrition policy: A qualitative study of India's Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) scheme". Food Policy.
  39. "A campaign to end malnutrition in Bihar".
  40. "Child Development Website". Source: Child Development programs site (2009).
  41. (2023-08-27). "Mangalurean doctor's pilot project helps bring down malnutrition in Yelburga". The Times of India.
  42. "National Rural Health Mission". Source: National Rural Health Mission (2005–2012).
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Malnutrition in India — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report