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The book revisits the causes of persisting under nutrition in
India, but moves away from the usual focus on women and children to
a broader view of the entire population. It estimates the economic
losses resulting from ignoring under nutrition in the adult working
population and questions the current narrow focus of nutrition
interventions, suggesting that a family-based approach may provide
quicker results and long-term sustainability. It compares the best
and worst performing states in the country to glean learnings from
both successes and failures and emphasizes the need to hand over
the ownership of nutrition outcomes from the state to the community
and family for more sustainable results. The book is organized in
three sections: Part 1 details the nutrition status of the
population, regional variations in nutrition outcomes and
government response in terms of interventions. Part 2 reviews
issues and concerns like gender discrimination, poor child
nutrition status, ineffective implementation of government
programmes in the field and the possible impacts of emerging issues
like climate change. Part 3 seeks solutions from both international
and country experiences.
The book revisits the causes of persisting under nutrition in
India, but moves away from the usual focus on women and children to
a broader view of the entire population. It estimates the economic
losses resulting from ignoring under nutrition in the adult working
population and questions the current narrow focus of nutrition
interventions, suggesting that a family-based approach may provide
quicker results and long-term sustainability. It compares the best
and worst performing states in the country to glean learnings from
both successes and failures and emphasizes the need to hand over
the ownership of nutrition outcomes from the state to the community
and family for more sustainable results. The book is organized in
three sections: Part 1 details the nutrition status of the
population, regional variations in nutrition outcomes and
government response in terms of interventions. Part 2 reviews
issues and concerns like gender discrimination, poor child
nutrition status, ineffective implementation of government
programmes in the field and the possible impacts of emerging issues
like climate change. Part 3 seeks solutions from both international
and country experiences.
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