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Posted On: 27 JUL 2022 4:29PM by PIB Delhi

Government has accorded high priority to the issue of malnutrition and is making serious efforts to address this issue. POSHAN Abhiyaan, a flagship scheme of the Government was launched in 2018 to address the malaise of malnutrition by adopting a synergised and result oriented approach. Further, to address various policy and systemic needs, the Integrated Child Development Scheme and Anganwadi Services schemes were re-evaluated in respect of programme design, implementation process, outcome and impact and for re-assessing the relevance of the programme in achieving its aims and goals. The efforts under the Supplementary Nutrition Programme under Anganwadi Services, Scheme for Adolescent Girls and POSHAN Abhiyaan have been re-aligned as ‘Saksham Anganwadi and POSHAN 2.0’ for maximizing nutritional outcomes. It seeks to address the challenges of malnutrition in children, adolescent girls, pregnant women and lactating mothers through a strategic shift in nutrition content and delivery and by creation of a convergent eco-system to develop and promote practices that nurture health, wellness and immunity.

POSHAN Abhiyaan aims to reduce malnutrition in the country by adopting a synergised and result oriented approach. The targets laid down under the Abhiyaan are as under:

 

S.No Objective Target
1. Prevent and reduce Stunting in children (0- 6 years) @ 2% p.a.
2. Prevent and reduce under-nutrition (underweight prevalence) in children (0-6 years) @ 2% p.a.
3. Reduce the prevalence of anaemia among young Children(6-59 months) @ 3% p.a.
4. Reduce the prevalence of anaemia among Women and Adolescent Girls in the age group of 15-49 years. @ 3% p.a.
5. Reduce Low Birth Weight (LBW). @ 2% p.a.

 

The estimated number of underweight, malnourished and severely malnourished children under 5 years of age is obtained under National Family Health Survey (NFHS) conducted by the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. As per the recent report of NFHS-5 (2019-21), the nutrition indicators for children under 5 years have improved as compared with NFHS-4 (2015-16). Stunting has reduced from 38.4% to 35.5%, Wasting has reduced from 21.0% to 19.3% and Underweight prevalence has reduced from 35.8% to 32.1%. Further percentage of women (15-49 years) whose BMI is below normal has reduced from 22.9 in NFHS-4 to 18.7 in NFHS-5. The State/UT wise prevalence of malnutrition among children under five years of age, and women (age 15-49 yrs) as per NFHS-5, 2019-21 is at Annexure I and Annexure-II respectively.

The efforts under the Supplementary Nutrition Programme under Anganwadi Services and POSHAN Abhiyaan have been rejuvenated and converged as ‘Saksham Anganwadi and POSHAN 2.0’ (Mission Poshan 2.0). It seeks to address the challenges of malnutrition in children, adolescent girls, pregnant women and lactating mothers through a strategic shift in nutrition content and delivery and by creation of a convergent eco-system to develop and promote practices that nurture health, wellness and immunity.

Poshan 2.0 shall focus on Maternal Nutrition, Infant and Young Child Feeding Norms, Treatment of MAM/SAM and Wellness through AYUSH. It will rest on the pillars of Convergence, Governance, and Capacity-building. Poshan Abhiyan will be the key pillar for Outreach and will cover innovations related to nutritional support, ICT interventions, Media Advocacy and Research, Community Outreach and Jan Andolan.

Under Poshan 2.0, focus is on diet diversity, food fortification, leveraging traditional systems of knowledge and popularizing use of millets. Nutrition awareness strategies under Poshan 2.0 aim to develop sustainable health and well-being through regional meal plans to bridge dietary gaps. Strategy of Jan Andolan, was developed to strengthen convergent actions across multiple stakeholders with focus on exclusive breast-feeding, complimentary feeding, growth monitoring, prevention of diarrhoea, hygiene, water and sanitation, anemia prevention, importance of Poshan Vatikas for cultivation of local vegetables, medicinal plants/herbs and fruits at the community level, etc. Poshan Abhiyaan has provided a strong platform for targeted home visits, community-based events (CBEs) and growth monitoring with greater emphasis placed on home visits to promote maternal, infant and young child nutrition practices. More than 40 crore activities have been carried out under Poshan Maah and Poshan Pakhwada and 3.70 lakh CBEs have been conducted since the launch of the Abhiyaan. Best practices have been disseminated through zonal work-shops to address the challenges of malnutrition.

 

This information was given by the Union Minister of Women and Child Development, Smt. Smriti Zubin Irani, in a written reply in Rajya Sabha today.

 

Annexure-I

 

States/UTs-wise nutritional status of children, NFHS-5, 2019-21

State/union territory Stunted (height-for-age)1 Wasted (weight-for-height)1 Underweight (weight-for-age)1
India 35.5 19.3 32.1
Andaman & Nicobar Islands 22.5 16.0 23.6
Andhra Pradesh 31.2 16.1 29.6
Arunachal Pradesh 28.0 13.1 15.4
Assam 35.3 21.7 32.8
Bihar 42.9 22.9 41.0
Chandigarh 25.3 8.4 20.6
Chhattisgarh 34.6 18.9 31.3
Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu 39.4 21.6 38.7
Delhi 30.9 11.2 21.8
Goa 25.8 19.1 24
Gujarat 39.0 25.1 39.7
Haryana 27.5 11.5 21.5
Himachal Pradesh 30.8 17.4 25.5
Jammu & Kashmir 26.9 19.0 21
Jharkhand 39.6 22.4 39.4
Karnataka 35.4 19.5 32.9
Kerala 23.4 15.8 19.7
Ladakh 30.5 17.5 20.4
Lakshadweep 32.0 17.4 25.8
Madhya Pradesh 35.7 18.9 33.0
Maharashtra 35.2 25.6 36.1
Manipur 23.4 9.9 13.3
Meghalaya 46.5 12.1 26.6
Mizoram 28.9 9.8 12.7
Nagaland 32.7 19.1 26.9
Odisha 31.0 18.1 29.7
Puducherry 20.0 12.4 15.3
Punjab 24.5 10.6 16.9
Rajasthan 31.8 16.8 27.6
Sikkim 22.3 13.6 13.1
Tamil Nadu 25.0 14.6 22.0
Telangana 33.1 21.7 31.8
Tripura 32.3 18.2 25.6
Uttar Pradesh 39.7 17.3 32.1
Uttarakhand 27.0 13.2 21.0
West Bengal 33.8 20.3 32.2

Source: NFHS-5 National reports

Note:

1 Below -2 standard deviations, based on the WHO standard

Below +2 standard deviations, based on the WHO standard

 

Annexure-II

 

As per NFHS-5 (2019-21), %tage of women (age 15-49 yrs) whose Body Mass Index (BMI) is below normal (BMI<18.5 kg/m2)

State NFHS-5
%tage of Women with BMI <18.5 kg/m2
India 18.7
Andaman & Nicobar 9.4
Andhra Pradesh 14.8
Arunachal Pradesh 5.7
Assam 17.6
Bihar 25.6
Chandigarh 13.0
Chhattisgarh 23.1
Dadra Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu 25.1
Delhi 10.0
Goa 13.8
Gujarat 25.2
Haryana 15.1
Himachal Pradesh 13.9
Jammu & Kashmir 5.2
Jharkhand 26.2
Karnataka 17.2
Kerala 10.1
Lakshadweep 8.0
Ladakh 4.4
Madhya Pradesh 23.0
Maharashtra 20.8
Manipur 7.2
Meghalaya 10.8
Mizoram 5.3
Nagaland 11.1
Odisha 20.8
Puducherry 9.0
Punjab 12.7
Rajasthan 19.6
Sikkim 5.8
Tamil Nadu 12.6
Telangana 18.8
Tripura 16.2
Uttar Pradesh 19.0
Uttarakhand 13.9
West Bengal 14.8

 

 

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