June 29, 2013
New Delhi — India needs to bring the malnutrition debate on the political centre-stage, experts noted Friday at the India launch of the Lancet 2013 series on maternal and child nutrition.
Developing countries have many basic challenges to tackle and child malnutrition
June 29, 2013
New Delhi — India needs to bring the malnutrition debate on the political centre-stage, experts noted Friday at the India launch of the Lancet 2013 series on maternal and child nutrition.
Developing countries have many basic challenges to tackle and child malnutrition
Economic growth is not reflected in the indicators for malnutrition in the country, Srinath Reddy, president of the Public Health Foundation of India told reporters.
Reddy advocated nutrition-specific interventions, and community-led initiatives.
Purnima Menon, senior research fellow at the Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute, pointed to the huge lack of research on nutrition in India, and the problem with data-gathering on the subject: "The last family health survey was in 2005. There is a very big research lacuna in India," she said.
The new Lancet series says that 3.1 million children younger than five years die every year across the world from under-nutrition, which is a staggering 45 percent of total child deaths in 2011.
Most children with stunted growth (69 million) are in south central Asia.
The series outlines ten key nutrition-specific interventions that, if scaled up to 90 percent in 34 high nutrition-burden countries, could reduce the global prevalence of stunting and wasting by 20 percent and 60 percent respectively.
However, several nutrition experts and members of the Indian Academy of Pediatrics, the largest association of pediatricians in India, have warned that the new set of papers on malnutrition published in Lancet, "should not be allowed to become an opportunity for commercial exploitation of malnutrition".
"The call for engaging with the "private sector" and unregulated marketing of commercial foods for preventing malnutrition in children raises serious concerns. The inherent conflict of interest will ensure that commercial considerations override sustainable nutritional goals," said a joint statement issued by leading nutrition experts and pediatricians.
Courtesy: IANS