服务承诺
资金托管
原创保证
实力保障
24小时客服
使命必达
51Due提供Essay,Paper,Report,Assignment等学科作业的代写与辅导,同时涵盖Personal Statement,转学申请等留学文书代写。
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标私人订制你的未来职场 世界名企,高端行业岗位等 在新的起点上实现更高水平的发展
积累工作经验
多元化文化交流
专业实操技能
建立人际资源圈Malnutrition_in_India
2013-11-13 来源: 类别: 更多范文
NEW DELHI: India accounts for 57 million (5 crore) of the world's 146 million(15 crores) malnourished children. around 1/3 is present in india.
It has the same rate of malnutrition as Ethiopia (47 per cent) and Nepal and Bangladesh (48 per cent). This is in stark contrast with the figures for China (eight per cent), Thailand (18) and even Afghanistan (39), according to a global report released by the United Nations Children's Fund here on Wednesday.
At the current rate of progress, the millennium development goal to halve child hunger by 2015 will not be reached till 2025, says the document, "Progress for Children: A Report Card on Nutrition, 2006."
The proportion of underweight children in developing countries has declined only slightly in the past 15 years — falling just 5 percentage points since 1990. One in four children under five in developing countries is underweight (27 per cent of 146 million). Nearly half of them live in India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, accounting for the death of 5.6 million children under five every year.
Each year 6,00,000 under-5 child deaths could be averted in India if simple health interventions along with correct feeding practices were universally applied. One out of every three adult women is underweight and therefore at risk of giving birth to low-weight babies
Severe malnutrition is more frequent among girls (19.1 per cent) than boys (16.9 per cent). While most infants in India are initially breastfed, only 37 per cent children are exclusively breastfed for four months.
Malnutrition rates among children of 0-3 years vary greatly across States, from Madhya Pradesh (55.1 per cent), Bihar (54.4), Orissa (54.4), Uttar Pradesh (51.7) and Rajasthan (50.6) to Goa (28.6), Manipur (27.5 ) and Kerala (26.9).
The report suggests half of all children , 50% in India under three are underweight, a quarter of all 25% children are born with low weight, and three quarters of under-three children 75% and half of adult women 50% are anaemic. Malnutrition is not only about hunger but also because of early marriage and consequently early motherhood as also lack of sanitation.
Insufficient quantity of food is less to blame for child under-nutrition than poor food quality and safety, and women's low social status.
Calling upon the Government to improve pre and post-natal care, the report suggests that malnutrition can be reduced only by ensuring that newborns are given colostrum, infants are exclusively breastfed for six months and adequate complementary foods are given three to five times a day after that. Children should be brought to health centres for immunisation and micronutrient supplementation.

