Urgent, concerted and comprehensive action on several fronts is called for to ensure that India’s children realise their full potential - physical and cognitive, and the rising trend of obesity and overweight is arrested and reversed. Only then can the country meet its World Health Assembly and Sustainable Development Goals.
The Good News:
After the depressing data, the good news is that India has the highest level of public investment in food and nutrition security through its public funded programmes and has entrenched the right to food and nutrition in its constitution and law.
In recent years, India has also achieved substantial gains on the nutrition front. Although at the all-India level there are problems, but as per the last National Family Health Survey, states like Arunachal Pradesh, Tripura, Chhattisgarh, Punjab and Mizoram, Gujarat, Odisha, Delhi and Assam have shown exemplary success in reducing stunting. Similarly, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Bihar, Jharkhand and Kerala have shown success in reduction of wasting while Sikkim, Assam, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Rajasthan, Bihar and Jharkhand have shown success in reduction of anaemia.
India’s POSHAN Abhiyaan; Prime Minister’s Overarching Scheme for Holistic Nourishment (erstwhile National Nutrition Mission)) with a measurable target to achieve the goals for a mission malnutrition-free India is a move just in time. It targets the reduction of stunting, under-nutrition, anaemia (among young children, women and adolescent girls) and low birth weight by 2 per cent, 2 per cent, 3 per cent and 2 per cent per annum respectively.
The Abhiyaan would in fact strive to achieve fast-forwarded reduction in stunting from 38.4 per cent (NFHS-IV) to 25 per cent by 2022. A number of state governments have their own flagship programmes on nutrition with a very high level of policy and political commitment. All these are bound to change the very nutrition landscape of India.
The programme would go a long way in achieving the target of Suposhit Bharat, Sashakt Bharat.
Awareness about the need for proper nutrition has spread across villages in India. For example, in Chiranjipur Village in Bachhwara block of Begusarai district in Bihar, women community change leaders of Sangam Village Organization have received high accolade and appreciation for spreading the message of good nutrition. What could proper nutrition achieve for their sons and daughters: the answers ranged from a good groom for their daughter who has grown tall thanks to good nutrition, or not having to go to the doctor at all, or the son meeting the stringent physical requirements needed to join the army or police.
Though the beginning to the end of malnutrition and under-nutrition has come over 70 years after Independence, it looks a promising one indeed. To take advantage of the demographic dividend and transform the country, India needs a nutrition revolution with women at the forefront.