[Answered] NFHS-6 highlights that while health interventions drive progress, dietary shifting toward processed foods creates an illusion of diversity. Evaluate India’s persistent nutritional challenges.

Introduction

NFHS-6 (2023-24) reflects India’s nutrition paradox: stunting declined to 29.3% and institutional deliveries crossed 90%, yet only 15.1% of children receive an adequate diet, exposing persistent dietary and micronutrient deficiencies.

India’s Nutrition Paradox Health Gains Amid Dietary Insecurity

  1. India has achieved notable improvements in maternal and child healthcare through POSHAN Abhiyaan, Mission Indradhanush, Anaemia Mukt Bharat, Jal Jeevan Mission, and strengthened frontline health networks.
  2. However, NFHS-6 reveals that improved healthcare access alone cannot guarantee nutritional security.
  3. The challenge has shifted from mere food availability to dietary quality, diversity, affordability, and behavioural practices.

Health Interventions Driving Progress

  1. Improved Maternal and Child Healthcare: Institutional deliveries increased to 90.6%, skilled birth attendance exceeded 91%. Full immunisation reached nearly 87%. Example: Mission Indradhanush.
  2. Reduction in Chronic Undernutrition: Stunting declined from 35.5% to 29.3%, severe wasting reduced from 7.7% to 5.2%. Reflects gains from sanitation, maternal education, and healthcare access. Example: POSHAN Abhiyaan.
  3. Better Public Health Infrastructure: Expansion of Health and Wellness Centres. Improved antenatal and postnatal care coverage. Example: Ayushman Bharat.

The Illusion of Dietary Diversity

  1. Shift Towards Processed Food Consumption: Recent Consumer Expenditure Surveys indicate declining cereal consumption but increasing expenditure on: processed foods, sugary beverages, ultra-processed snacks and convenience foods. This creates an appearance of dietary diversification without nutritional adequacy.
  2. Micronutrient Deficiency Amid Calorie Sufficiency: Hidden hunger persists despite adequate calorie intake. Deficiencies in iron, zinc, Vitamin A, Vitamin B12 and folate remain widespread. Example: Persistent anaemia burden.
  3. Double Burden of Malnutrition: NFHS-6 highlights simultaneous prevalence of: undernutrition among children and obesity and NCDs among adults. Overweight/obese women increased from 24% to 30.7%; men from 22.9% to 27.3%. Example: Urban obesity surge.

Persistent Structural Nutritional Challenges

  1. Maternal Time Poverty: Working women face childcare constraints. Limited crèche facilities affect breastfeeding and complementary feeding. Example: Rural farm households.
  2. Poor Infant Feeding Practices: Exclusive breastfeeding declined from 63.7% to 55.8%. Only 15.1% children (6–23 months) receive adequate diets. Example: Delayed complementary feeding.
  3. Affordability Gap: According to the FAO’s State of Food Security and Nutrition reports, nutritious diets remain unaffordable for large sections of the population. Fruits, vegetables, pulses and animal proteins remain costly. Example: Protein affordability crisis.
  4. Regional Inequalities: Economic growth alone has not improved nutrition outcomes. Gujarat records lower adequate child diet indicators than Jharkhand despite higher income levels. Example: Nutrition-growth disconnect.
  5. Cereal-Centric Food System: MSP and procurement largely favour rice and wheat. Limited incentives for pulses, millets, fruits and vegetables. Example: Monoculture bias.
  6. Weak Nutrition-Sensitive Agriculture: NITI Aayog’s nutrition strategy advocates diversification toward nutrient-dense crops.Example: Millet Mission.
  7. Institutional and Governance Issues: Nutrition requires coordinated action across: health, agriculture, women and Child Development and water and sanitation. Yet convergence remains inadequate. Example: Fragmented implementation.
  8. Data Utilisation Deficit: Large-scale Anganwadi growth-monitoring data often remains underutilised for local interventions. Example: District nutrition planning.

Emerging Challenges

  1. Technological: Aggressive digital marketing of ultra-processed foods targets children. Example: Online food advertising.
  2. Legal and Regulatory: Delayed Front-of-Pack Labelling (FOPL) regulations. Weak restrictions on unhealthy foods. Example: FSSAI reforms pending.
  3. Human Capital: First 1,000 days determine cognitive development. Malnutrition reduces productivity and learning outcomes. Example: Demographic dividend risk.

Way Forward

  1. Food System Reforms: Diversify PDS with millets, pulses and fortified foods. Example: PM Poshan integration.
  2. Behaviour Change Communication: Strengthen counselling by ASHAs, AWWs and ANMs. Promote breastfeeding and complementary feeding. Example: Annaprasana campaigns.
  3. Nutrition-Sensitive Agriculture: Incentivise horticulture, pulses and bio-fortified crops. Example: Nutri-garden model.
  4. Regulatory Measures: Implement Front-of-Pack Warning Labels. Restrict marketing of ultra-processed foods to children. Example: Chile model.
  5. Strengthen Care Infrastructure: Expand community crèches and childcare centres. Reduce maternal time poverty. Example: NGO crèche models.
  6. Data-Driven Governance: Deploy district nutrition analysts and digital monitoring systems. Example: Real-time growth tracking.

Conclusion

Echoing Dr. M.S. Swaminathan’s vision that nutrition security is true food security, NFHS-6 reminds India that healthcare saves lives, but affordable, diverse and nutritious diets build human capital.

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