Supplementary nutritional programmes in india

Post on 18-Dec-2014

153 views 2 download

description

This presentation was made to describe the scarcity of food in the country and to teach about the steps taken by the government. This decribes about the various nutritional supplementation progammes in the India, their advantage and disadvantages.

transcript

Supplementary nutrition in India

Dr. Babu lal MeenaMD Pediatrics

Objectives

• To know about nutritional programmes in India

• Basic structure of these programmes

• Benefits of these programmes

• Hurdles in implementation

Poverty

Undernutritionrelated disease

Retardation ofGrowth and

development

Poor strength of adults

Impaired productivity

Low earningcapacity

OutcomeUnder-Nutrition

ImmediateCauses

InadequateDietary Intake Disease

UnderlyingHealth /NutritionCauses

Inadequate Care for Mothers and Children

InsufficientAccess to Food

Lack of health services & unhealthy environment

Current Nutrition Status

• 26% of the population is still below poverty line

• Wide gap in food production and consumption

• 46% children below 3 years are underweight, 38 % are

stunted, 19% are wasted

• 2.2 million suffer from cretinism

• 7 million children per year affected by Nutritional blindness

Food security/General Distribution

Supplementar

y feeding

Therapeu

tic

feeding

Early Intervention Late Intervention

Cost-Benefit Not Cost-effective

National Nutrition Programme

• Integrated child development service scheme

• Mid day meal programme

• National prophylaxis programme for control of Vitamin A

deficiency

• National prophylaxis programme for control of nutritional

anemia

• National control of Iodine deficiency disorders

ICDS

• Integrated Child Development Service (ICDS) scheme

• Central departments

– Department of Women and Child development, Ministry of Human

Resources Development

• Nodal departments

– Social welfare, Rural development, Tribal welfare, Health & family

welfare or Women and child development

ICDS

• Beneficiaries

1. Children below 6 years

2. Pregnant and lactating women

3. Women in the age group of 15-45 years

4. Adolescent girls in selected blocks

ICDS

• Objectives

– Proper physical and psychological development of child

– Improve nutritional and health status of children 0-6 years

– Reduce incidence of mortality, morbidity, malnutrition and school

drop-out

– Enhance the capability of the mother and family to look after the

health, nutritional and developmental needs of the child

– Achieve effective coordination of policy and implementation among

various department to promote child development

Norms of anganwadi

Type AWC/Population

Mini AWC

Urban 800-1000 Nil

Rural 500-1500 150-500

Tribal 300-1500 150-300

Urban 400-800 Nil

Rural 400-600 150-400

Tribal 300-800 150-300

Populationpreviously

Populationcurrently

Target group and service provider

Services Target group Services provided by

Nutrition and Supplementary nutrition

Children < 6 years, pregnant and lactating women

AWW, AWH

Immunization(6 disease)

Children < 6 years, pregnant and lactating women

ANM, MO

Health check up Children < 6 years, pregnant and lactating women

ANM, AWW, MO

Referral Children < 6 years, pregnant and lactating women

ANM, MO, AWW

Pre school education 3-6 years AWW

Nutrition and health examination

15-45 years ANM, MO, AWW

Supplementary Nutrition Norms

Beneficiaries Pre revised Revised

Calorie Protein Calorie Protein

Below 6 years 300 8-10 500 12-15

Severely malnourished children

600 20 800 20-25

Pregnant women and nursing mothers

500 15-20 600 18-20

Financial norms

Pre revised rates Revised rates

Children (6-72 months) Rs. 2 Rs. 4

Severely malnourished child (6-72 months)

Rs. 2.7 Rs. 6

Pregnant women and nursing mothers

Rs. 2.3 Rs. 5

Achievements

• 244 lac pre-school children, 95 lac nursing mothers and 562

lac beneficiaries are getting supplementary nutrition

• Better immunization coverage

• Increased institutional delivery

Mid-Day

Meals in

India

MDM programme

• Mid day meal programme

• Since 1923 in Madras Tamilnadu 1982

• Formally launched on Aug 1995 in India

• November 2001 Supreme court made obligatory for the Govt.

to provide cooked meals to children in Govt. school

• By Oct-2002 it also included Govt. supported schools

MDM programme

• Objectives

– Increase school attendance

– Reduce school dropout

– Beneficial impact on children’s nutrition and health

Norms in MDM programme

Beneficiaries Calorie (k/cal/day)

Protein (gm/kg/day)

Money

Up to 8th class 350-500 (1/3 RDA)

12-15 (1/2 RDA) Rs. 2.5

Achievements of MDM scheme

• Better nutrition to children

• More school enrollment

• Decreased school dropout

• Socialization and Educational benefits

• Better nutritional status

• Decreased economic burden to families

Enrolment, Attendance and Retention

• Enrolment: Big gains, especially for girls and children of other disadvantaged groups (SCs and STs).

•Attendance and rentention: Limited evidence on

improvement but measurement issues make it

difficult to capture these effects.

Nutrition: Quantity

• Prescribed food quantity

– 300 grams of grain & 8-12 grams of protein

– Increased to 450 grams of grain and 12-15 grams of

protein in the 2006 Guidelines

Nutrition: Quality• Depends on:

– Menu (plain boiled rice) – Cooking practices – Hygiene conditions (kitchens, drinking water)

Socialization and Health benefits

• Socialization (Eating together)

• Overcoming caste discrimination(Denial of food to Scheduled caste children, Segregated seating, separate food/utensils for children of different castes)

• Inculcating hygienic habits (Washing hands and utensils before and after eating, eating together)

Educational benefits

• Impact on learning:– Eliminates classroom hunger - children able to

concentrate better as many children would come to school on an empty stomach

– Makes school environment more fun

Accidents

• Many small no of poisoning cases

• Largest is in Bihar

– Killed 23 children

– Organophosphorous poisoning

– Occurred due to unmonitored food supply

– It could be prevented by good monitoring

What not done

• Surveillance of supplied raw material

• Good storage facilities not available

• Hygiene maintenance not done

• Sample survey of food served to children

• Action despite of repeated poisoning cases

A survey done by an institute

• Small cooking area

• Less no of staff

• Lack of good light and ventilation

• Lack of exhaust fan

• Lack of wash basin and soap, hot water

• Lack of staff changing facility

• Gloves not used

A survey done by an institute cont.

• Hand swab showing

– Coagulase negative staph, Staph aureus, E. Coli

– Enterococcus, acinetobacter

• Food showing

– Bacilus cereus

– Enterococcus, coliforms

Advantage

• Better nutrition to child

• Improved health of child and

women

• Decreased family burden

• Good school attendance

• Reduced school drop out

DisadvantageDisadvantage

• Recurrent incidence of poisoning

• No national system of nutrition

monitoring and surveillance

Food security bill

• Food security act – 2013

• 1.25 lakh crore, Central Govt. funded

• Largest in the world

• 2/3 rd population will receive 5 kg/month food grain at 1-3

rupee/kg from ration shop

• Under process in parliament

What could be done

• Targeted surveillance to find out prevalence of

undernourished children

• Surveillance of mid day meal kitchens and storage system

• Proper monitoring of mid day meal

• To maintain hygiene of food

Thank you