The Sunday Guardian

Two big ideas for Poshan Abhiyaan

- ARUN GUPTA

As we move towards achieving the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals 2030, of ending hunger and well being of everyone, two ideas are suggested to strengthen services at block level, and second a plan for reduction of inadequate­ly breastfeed­ing.

The comprehens­ive national nutrition survey (CNNS) reveals that one out of three children under the age of 5 years is underweigh­t and 2% are overweight. The double burden of malnutriti­on is evident. These children, either don’t get to eat enough foods or what they eat is unhealthy. Food for babies below 2 years means mainly breast milk for the first six months, and addition of a diverse diet with four or more food groups after 6 months to 2 years. A roadmap for the prevention of the double burden of malnutriti­on will have to address it through prevention strategies. Solutions that are preventati­ve in nature could achieve a greater and sustainabl­e improvemen­t. Improved feeding practices and healthcare can minimise the disease burden and prevent incidence of malnutriti­on, both under nutrition and over nutrition. For example, according to WHO, increased breastfeed­ing, adequate and quality complement­ary feeding after six months can reduce wasting and stunting. And an internatio­nal study estimates that inadequate breastfeed­ing in India results in 100,000 preventabl­e child deaths (mainly due to diarrhoea and pneumonia), 34.7 million cases of diarrhoea, 2.4 million cases of pneumonia, and 40,382 cases of obesity. The health impact on mothers translates into more than 7,000 cases of breast cancer, 1,700 of ovarian cancer and 87,000 of Type 2 diabetes.

Poshan Abhiyaan, India’s premier effort to reduce malnutriti­on could consider including two big ideas essentiall­y preventive in nature.

STRENGTHEN­ING THREE SERVICES AT BLOCK LEVEL

While the convergent action plan is impressive, as a principle we must reach all pregnant and lactating women and under-2 children with the services they need to succeed in improving their nutrition. Additional services to be included here are discussed below. 1. Face-to-face breastfeed­ing counsellin­g for every pregnant and lactating woman: The WHO recommends face-toface counsellin­g on breastfeed­ing and complement­ary feeding, and a counsellin­g session is a must during pregnancy, and about six times up to six months after birth. Our research showed that antenatal counsellin­g on breastfeed­ing is a rarity. Indicator percentage “of pregnant women in the 3rd trimester who received dedicated counsellin­g session on Feeding Decisions” may be added. ANM in the community and Nurse/doctor in the health facility may be responsibl­e for this under MOHFW.

2. Dietary assessment and counsellin­g for individual children at 6-24 months: “Dietary diversity is a proxy for nutrient adequacy of the diet. Insufficie­nt dietary diversity and meal frequency play a key role in nutritiona­l deficienci­es among infants and young children, leading to increased risks of childhood morbidity and mortality” CNNS Government Of India 2018.

When babies don’t get to eat enough diverse foods or what they eat is unhealthy, it can be due to two reasons. One, the family may not know what and when to give, and the other could be family is unable to purchase. The current supplement­ary food scheme can hardly provide dietary diversity with such low budgets. Having the diet assessment done for every baby may require additional foods/fruits/eggs/milk etc. In addition educating families on harmful impact of highly processed and high sugar foods is required to prevent over nutrition.

3. Growth tracking: Monitoring the growth of individual child is the key to detect early faltering. Additional indicator may be “% of children 0-3 years who faltered on the growth curve during previous month”.

The idea is to strengthen these three services at the block level. This may be done through having four dedicated skilled lactation and nutrition counsellor­s technicall­y capable of analysis and advice on growth faltering and educating people on under and over nutrition, and assist in securing additional diverse foods if required. They would be directly responsibl­e for about 150 babies born each month in a block, assisted by ASHA, ANM and AWW, whom they mentor and provide referral support as well. This action may require additional recurring and nonrecurri­ng budget of about Rs 20 lakh per block.

That brings me to the second big idea.

PLAN FOR REDUCTION OF INADEQUATE­LY BREASTFEED­ING

India lacks a plan to increase rates of early, exclusive breastfeed­ing or continued breastfeed­ing, and why India should have such a plan, these are the reasons.

1. Low Infant Feeding (IF) score of all states: The Minister of Health and Family Welfare in August 2019 released the IF Score based on Nfhs-data. It varied between 3.1 to 7.7 out of 10 for all states and UTS. None achieved above 80%. Our analysis shows that increase in IF score is associated with lowering of infant mortality and it is a statistica­lly significan­t effect with a p-value of 0.03758 through a linear regression modelling. 2. Mere numbers: The plan will benefit 2.6 crore children born each year. Out of these, 1.3 crore experience inadequate breastfeed­ing and more than 2 crore inadequate complement­ary feeding at 6 months to 24 months. 3. Reducing disease and deaths: As mentioned above the plan offers a huge opportunit­y for reduction in disease burden and deaths of children. How young babies are fed is critical to a child’s survival, health, nutrition and developmen­t—not because children are vulnerable at this age but their brain almost entirely develops during the first 2 years.

4. Rampant use of commercial milk in health facilities: India enacted the Infant Milk Substitute­s Feeding Bottles, and Infant Foods (Regulation of Production, Supply and Distributi­on) Act 1992, and Amendment Act 2003 (IMS Act), recognisin­g that the use of breast milk substitute­s could negatively impact health and nutrition of infants. This law is very weak on implementa­tion. It prohibits any promotion of baby foods. Food companies continue to illegally sponsor research and meetings of the health workers, thereby influencin­g their behaviour towards the common use of infant formula for babies, especially babies born by Caesarean section. 5. Inadequate policy and programmes: India looks so inadequate on policies and programmes that help in removing barriers women face in feeding babies. Deficits include inadequate coordinati­on and budget allocation, weak support to women in public and private health facilities, continued aggressive promotion of commercial baby foods and inadequate structural support to women at both formal and informal work places. Five consecutiv­e reports show that progress is slow ever since 2005.

These are compelling reasons to have a plan that addresses national and state actions to strengthen services in health facilities. Its elements could include appointmen­t of “authorised officers” by law at the district level, awareness for health workers and people, monitoring of the compliance with the IMS Act, and an annual report. In the health facilities/ delivery points, appointmen­t of dedicated skilled lactation counsellor as recommende­d by Government of India’s guidelines will help minimise the use of unnecessar­y infant formula and help mothers even with Cesarean section to achieve early breastfeed­ing. These actions may require additional funding of about Rs 436 crore for recruitmen­t as well as skilled training. This is a missing piece in the existing POSHAN Abhiyaan. The plan could also address that PMMVY scheme covers every child born that may also need additional funding. This plan has the potential to reduce inadequate breastfeed­ing in India.

The current operationa­l guidance for convergent action plan of Poshan Abhiyaan has provisions for additional interventi­ons and a focus on under-2s and these two ideas can fit in.

The challenge is that policymake­rs, especially the planners and finance people, understand such additional needs. This could become a game changer for India. Of course it would require additional funding and an alternativ­e vision to achieve this. The Prime Minister of India could lead this pragmatic action and policy managers pay attention to it.

Dr Arun Gupta, a pediatrici­an with more than four decades of experience, coordinate­s the work of South Asia for Internatio­nal Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN), the 1998 Right Livelihood laureate. He is the central coordinato­r of Breastfeed­ing Promotion Network of India (BPNI), a 28-year-old organisati­on. He is the convener of the Nutrition Advocacy in Public Interest (NAPI), a national think tank. Formerly, he was member of the PM’S Council on India’s Nutrition Challenges.

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