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Malnutrition declined during Manmohan govt: World Bank
Report says child undernourishment fell 9.1 percentage points from FY06 to FY14; exclusive breastfeeding data trend shows 2025 target well in line
India's percentage of children whose growth is stunted due to undernourishment showed a 9.1 percentage point decline between 2005-06 and 2013-14, the period when the Manmohan Singh-led government was in power, a new World Bank report on nutrition in India says.Report says child undernourishment fell 9.1 percentage points from FY06 to FY14; exclusive breastfeeding data trend shows 2025 target well in line
The report, issued on Thursday, based its findings on the 2005-06 National Family Health Survey and the preliminary findings of the 2013-14 Rapid Survey of Children.
In this period, the average annual rate of reduction in children with stunted growth was 2.6 per cent, below the national target of 3.7 per cent but much higher than the 1.7 per cent of earlier surveys.
The findings show the percentage of infants exclusively breastfed had risen in this period from 46.4 per cent to 71.6 per cent. Both parameters are considered key indicators on child malnutrition and health.
"The rise in exclusive breastfeeding rates from 46.4 per cent to 71.6 per cent in eight years represents an average annual rate of increase of 5.5 per cent, far above the rate required to meet India's World Health Assembly (WHA) target by 2025 (1.5 per cent). In fact, if the preliminary numbers hold, India will have by by 2025 far surpassed its WHA exclusive breastfeeding target of 57 per cent," the report said.
The percentage of children under five years who are wasting away dipped from 2005-06 to 2013-14 from 20 to 15 per cent, the report said. Wasting, or low weight for height, is a strong predictor of mortality among children under five. The report says India loses two to three per cent of its GDP every year due to under-nutrition among children in the age group of up to two years.
"Significant direct and indirect economic losses are associated with under-nutrition, with direct productivity losses estimated at more than 10 per cent of lifetime individual earnings, and about two to three per cent loss to GDP," it said.In the last decade, India has improved its health status faster than other South Asian countries, the new data indicates, as opposed to the widespread belief that countries like Bangladesh had done a better job on reducing malnutrition than India despite India’s faster economic growth.
The biggest nutritional success from the new numbers is India’s progress on the number of infants below the age of six months who are exclusively breastfed, an important nutritional practice. From 46 per cent, this number has now shot up dramatically to 72 per cent, more than surpassing the World Health Assembly’s targets for India for 2025.
What caused this change? IFPRI credits the government’s push to extend nutrition schemes like the Integrated Child Development Services along with better monitoring by a Supreme Court-appointed committee, improve access to health under the National Rural Health Mission, provide access to work under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act and strengthen the implementation of the Public Delivery System for subsidized grain.
“In the last 10 to 15 years, what happened in India was similar to what we have seen in Brazil and China – fast-growing economies with reasonably concurrent investments in social sector programmes, leading to what we would expect to see, which is an improvement in health outcomes,” Dr. Purnima Menon, senior research fellow at IFPRI, told The Hindu. While countries like Nepal and Bangladesh conduct health surveys every three years, India has not had one for nearly ten years, Dr. Menon added.
For More Detailed Figures and Interactive Graphs Visit - ‘Malnourishment declined sharply among children in India’ - The Hindu
Source(s) and Reference(s):- Malnutrition declined during Manmohan govt: World Bank | Business Standard News
'Child stunting drops sharply in India' - The Hindu
India reduces hunger, moves up 8 ranks in global index | Business Line
The Original Repot - http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/ghi14.pdf
>> This Year, India with a score of has been removed from the list of countries with extremely alarming (GHI ≥ 30), or alarming (GHI between 20.0 and 29.9) hunger situation of the Global Hunger Index (GHI) - but is still classified as "Serious".
>> Regional Comparison
>> The number of hungry people in India has fallen to by 9.5 per cent in two decades from 1994 to 2014, but in neigbouring Pakistan the number has risen by over 38 per cent in the same period.
No of hungry people in India falling but rising in Pakistan: Report - Economic Times
>> India has improved it's score from 30.30 in GHI 1990 to 17.80 in GHI 2014 - with this India now ranks 55th out of 76 countries—ahead of Bangladesh and Pakistan, but behind Nepal and Sri Lanka.
2014 Global Hunger Index—Background Facts and Findings for Asia | International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
No of hungry people in India falling but rising in Pakistan: Report - Economic Times
>> India has improved it's score from 30.30 in GHI 1990 to 17.80 in GHI 2014 - with this India now ranks 55th out of 76 countries—ahead of Bangladesh and Pakistan, but behind Nepal and Sri Lanka.
2014 Global Hunger Index—Background Facts and Findings for Asia | International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)