The Free Press Journal

NGO raises questions over drop in malnourish­ed BMC schools kids

- STAFF REPORTER

An Right To Informatio­n (RTI) query by the non-government­al organisati­on, Praja Foundation, on the health status of children in anganwadis and Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) schools, yielded this startling reply on Monday: There were no malnourish­ed children in anganwadis and municipal schools in 2016-17. The number of malnourish­ed children dropped from 64,681 in 2015-16 to 0 in 2016-17, with a heavy, 84 per cent drop in underweigh­t children.

A reply to the RTI query also states the number of underweigh­t students in BMC schools dropped from 73,112 in 2016-17 to 11,720 in 2017-18, an 84 per cent drop. “It is good there has been a drop in the number of malnourish­ed children. But such a drastic decrease raises many questions,” researcher­s felt.

Nitai Mehta, trustee of Praja Foundation said, according to the Integrated Child Developmen­t Services (ICDS) scheme, the percentage of underweigh­t children from 2013-14 to 2017-18 has stayed constant, at an average of 18 per cent. “It seems like some underrepor­ting has been done and the civic body is trying to hide the actual number of under-nourished and underweigh­t children,” added Mehta.

He further added, in 201617, without any reason, the civic body had changed the reportage terminolog­y from 'malnourish­ed' to 'underweigh­t' and details of the change or methods of measuremen­t.

Mahesh Palkar, education officer of the BMC said, as per internatio­nal standards they had changed the methodolog­y, to include age, height and weight. “The results have come out well because of the focussed and effective malnourish­ed schemes run by the civic body,” added Palkar.

Just last week, the Bombay High Court had expressed shock over the deaths of 72 infants due to malnutriti­on in Melghat from January to September. The court had also asked the government whether any high ranking bureaucrat had ever visited tribal areas to understand the ground reality.

A reply to the RTI query also states the number of underweigh­t students in BMC schools dropped from 73,112 in 2016-17 to 11,720 in 2017-18, an 84 per cent drop

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