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Four out of 10 Pakistani children under five years of age are stunted: survey

maithil

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Four out of 10 Pakistani children under five years of age are stunted while 17.7% suffer from wasting. The double burden of malnutrition is becoming increasingly apparent, with almost 1 in 3 children underweight (28.9%). The prevalence of overweight among children under five has almost doubled over seven years, increasing from 5% in 2011 to 9.5% in 2018, reveals the National Nutrition Survey (NNS) 2018.

The survey, which was disseminated at an event organised by the Ministry of National Services here on Monday, assesses the nutritional status of children under five, adolescent girls, and women of child bearing age, including pregnant and lactating women. Being the largest-ever nutrition survey, it is designed to provide policymakers with district-specific nutrition-related that will help develop evidence-based policies to address the root causes of malnutrition in Pakistan.

The event was attended by Special Assistant to the PM on Health Dr. Zafar Mirza as chief guest. He was flanked by Director General of Health Dr. Assad Hafeez, the Country Representative of UNICEF Aida Girma-Melaku, the Head of DFID-Pakistan Joanna Reid, the principal investigator of the survey Dr. Zulfiqar Bhutta from Aga Khan University, and the Director of Nutrition Dr. Baseer Achakzai. According to the survey, the findings of which were disseminated by Dr. Bhutta, stunting is a major problem in Pakistan, with 12 million children with low height for age. The prevalence of stunting at 40.2% remains at a global critical level, varying from 32.6% in ICT to 48.3% in KP-NMD. The average annual reduction rate is estimated at 0.5%, too slow to significantly reduce the stunting rate in Pakistan.

Since 1997, the prevalence of wasting is on the rise, from 8.6% in 1997 to 15.1% in 2011 and 17.7% in 2018. Despite improvements in other socioeconomic indicators, acute malnutrition remains in a state of nutrition emergency, the survey states. This is the highest rate of wasting in Pakistan’s history. This form of malnutrition is most prevalent in Sindh (23.3%) and KP-NMD (23.1%), whereas GB and ICT have the lowest proportion of children with wasting, at 9.4% and 12.1% respectively. The prevalence of underweight among children under five years of age (i.e. weight for age below 2 z-score) is high in all provinces/regions, from 19.2% in ICT to 41.3% in Sindh. The survey estimates the proportion of overweight children under five to be 9.5%. Prevalence is highest in KP-NMD (18.7%) and Balochistan (16.7%), and lowest in Sindh (5.2%) and ICT (5.8%).

According to NNS 2018, more than half (53.7%) of Pakistani children are anaemic and 5.7% are severely anaemic. The prevalence of anaemia has been consistently high since 2001 when it stood at 50.9%, then rose to 61.9% in 2011, and declined to 53.7% in 2018.

The prevalence of iron deficiency anemia is 28.6%, that of zinc deficiency is 18.6%, and that of Vitamin A deficiency is 51.5%. The survey has found that 12.7% children in Pakistan have a functional disability in one of these six domains: around 1.2% demonstrate functional disability in seeing, 1.5% in hearing, 2.6% in walking, 4.5% in remembering, 8.5% in selfcare and 5.6% in communication

The survey also states that women of reproductive age in Pakistan bear a double burden of malnutrition. One in seven (14.4%) are undernourished, a decline from 18% in 2011 to 14%, while overweight and obesity are increasing. In NNS 2011 28% were reported to be overweight or obese, rising to 37.8% 2018. Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Zafar Mirza announced that the start of a process leading to the development of a National Nutritional Action Plan.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/48...en-under-five-years-of-age-are-stunted-survey
 
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ہمارے حالات کچھ اتنے بھی برے نہیں جتنا یہ ہمیں بدنام کر رہے ہیں
 
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70 years + 105 billion US$ debts and outcome is this? All those who were in power + bureaucracy are to be tried in courts for this crime against humanity.
 
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Abundance of Junk food available in Pakistan. Absence of proper food regulations and inept food / drug authorities. e.g. the most popular ice cream sold in Pakistan cannot even call their product ice cream per laws, they are without milk. If it was me I would ban selling of lays, cheetos, kurkure, juices, cold drinks, cadbury, processed food, and lot of other blah blah or introduce age restriction for consumption. These products are not junk only but a source of spreading plastic pollution even in remote areas.

I don't know what is wrong with children these days, they would eat any junk food but anything healthy. Plus the new breed of mothers are to blame as well. Lack of breast feeding, and then lack of those instincts how to raise children is common.
 
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I don't know what is wrong with children these days, they would eat any junk food but anything healthy. Plus the new breed of mothers are to blame as well. Lack of breast feeding, and then lack of those instincts how to raise children is common.
Mobile , internet , games ....
I havent had breakfast today ,too busy in fcebook .
Hhhhhh imran khan ban these plzz ..
 
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Mobile , internet , games ....
I havent had breakfast today ,too busy in fcebook .
Hhhhhh imran khan ban these plzz ..


People take the present for granted, when they are healthy they don't mind neither care for consequences of their bad habits. What you do in your youth comes back to you when you age. I keep telling people change your eating habits, change your lifestyle, you are no more in teen to thirty age bracket, but seldom do I succeed in convincing.
 
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after budget sales tax is expected to rise to 18% and food prices have almost doubled in last 9 months of pti govt so I think in future disabled children will be born without components of brain more worst than stunted brain
 
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According to NNS 2018, more than half (53.7%) of Pakistani children are anaemic and 5.7% are severely anaemic. The prevalence of anaemia has been consistently high since 2001 when it stood at 50.9%, then rose to 61.9% in 2011, and declined to 53.7% in 2018.

The prevalence of iron deficiency anemia is 28.6%, that of zinc deficiency is 18.6%, and that of Vitamin A deficiency is 51.5%. The survey has found that 12.7% children in Pakistan have a functional disability in one of these six domains: around 1.2% demonstrate functional disability in seeing, 1.5% in hearing, 2.6% in walking, 4.5% in remembering, 8.5% in selfcare and 5.6% in communication

The survey also states that women of reproductive age in Pakistan bear a double burden of malnutrition. One in seven (14.4%) are undernourished, a decline from 18% in 2011 to 14%, while overweight and obesity are increasing. In NNS 2011 28% were reported to be overweight or obese, rising to 37.8% 2018. Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Zafar Mirza announced that the start of a process leading to the development of a National Nutritional Action Plan.

Those are some sobering statistics that highlight the importance of investing in social development instead of other endeavors as a matter of national priorities.
 
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One of the most succesful method that India adopted to overcome the issue is the mid day meal program.
It not only brought kids to school, but also ensured that they received proper diet.

Other than this the Jacha Bacha Program also provides ample nuturion to pregnant women and the kids there after.

Kids are the future, its better a good part of money is spent on them , otherwise all the money spent on defence will be of no use, when there wont be a healthy generation ahead.
 
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Yes. The numbers cannot be that bad, surely. The report must be flawed. I agree.

Yeah sab bas guess work hots hai
2017 ki census say pehlay apni population ka nhi pata tha
aisi baton ka kaisay pata chalay ga
 
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