Fighting Child Malnutrition
Published By: National Academy of Agricultural Sciences, India | Published Date: December, 01 , 2012India has the dubious distinction of having the highest burden of malnutrition in
the world – higher than Sub-Saharan Africa. Nearly 50 per cent of our children
are underweight and stunted and 70 per cent suffer from serious nutritional
deficiencies. The very high incidence of child undernutrition in India is both an
ethical and economic imperative. Evidences show that avoidable undernutrition
among young children reduces the effectiveness of investments in education and
economic development. Overcoming early childhood undernutrition requires investing
in targeted nutrition interventions for immediate impacts, as well as investing in
packages of interventions that address the immediate and underlying determinants
of undernutrition. Moreover, the benefit-cost ratio for nutrition interventions ranges
from 5 to 200, much more than other interventions.
Author(s): National Academy of Agricultural Sciences, India | Posted on: Oct 16, 2014 | Views(865) | Download (186)