Business Standard published an article stating that India could be seeing an increase in child undernutrition, reversing decades of gains. If the all-India rates of child stunting were to rise, as the Phase-I data indicate, this would represent the first increase in child stunting since 1998-99. Variables including mother’s nutrition, sanitation, child’s weight at birth, and infant nutrition play a role in stunting; hence increases in stunting are not necessarily a referendum on the health or nutrition policies of the current government. Senior Research Fellow Purnima Menon, in a long interview, cautioned, “But it’s not good news,” and stunting of children born between 2015 and 2019 likely reflected, in part, the economic slowdown of the last few years. I think what we are seeing right now is the impact of the economic slowdown of the last few years and some of those economic shocks that were experienced. I don’t think there is a single country anywhere in the world where child stunting has gone down without economic growth.” Bloomberg Quint.
Child nutrition: India may be reversing decades of progress, show govt data (Business Standard)
December 15, 2020