Resource detail

Title: National family health survey India 2005-06: Nutrition in India
Organization:Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India
Year:2009

This report provides clear evidence of the poor state of nutrition among young children, women, and men in India and the lack of progress over time, based on measurements of height and weight, anaemia testing, testing for the iodization of household cooking salt, utilization of nutrition programmes, and information on child feeding practices and vitamin A supplementation. Young children in India suffer from some of the highest levels of stunting, underweight, and wasting observed in any country in the world, and 7 out of every 10 young children are anaemic. Although poverty is an important factor in the poor nutrition situation, nutritional deficiencies are widespread even in households that are economically well off. Inadequate feeding practices for children make it difficult to achieve the needed improvements in children’s nutritional status, and nutrition programmes have been unable to make much headway in dealing with these serious nutritional problems. Adults in India suffer from a dual burden of malnutrition (abnormal thinness and overweight or obesity). Almost half of Indian women age 15-49 (48 percent) and 43 percent of Indian men age 15-49 have one of these two nutritional problems.




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