Understanding malnutrition in India

Malnutrition is one of the largest factors supressing India's spectacular growth. In a country of lunar missions, billionaires, and nuclear power, a staggering 46% of all India children under 5 years old are still underweight. In India, where everything is on a large scale, malnutrition is daunting - an estimated 200 million children are underweight at any given time, with more than 6 million of those children suffering from the worst form of malnutrition, severe acute malnutrition. Experts estimate that malnutrition constitutes over 22% of India's disease burden, making malnutrition one of the nation's largest health threats.

The causes of malnutrition and therefore the solutions to the problem vary as much as the Indian people. To understand and solve malnutrition requires patience, nuance, flexibility, and above all determination.

Follow me as I set out to understand malnutrition in the subcontinent and begin to tackle it

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Finishing up our baseline surveys, on to the real work

Now that the training of our Community Nutrition Educators (CNEs) is complete, Real Medicine Foundation Team India has started our field surveys in 500 villages in Southwest Madhya Pradesh. The CNEs are going door to door to find out about nutrition levels among all children under 5 and ask the thousands of families about livelihoods, access to healthcare and public services, and available food. This is the first time a survey of this size and scope is being conducted in these areas.

Our goal is to gain a better understanding of the level of malnutrition for our interventions and acquire as much information as we can to really understand the underlying causes of malnutrition in the villages. Once our surveys our complete, we will have a comprehensive list of which children are malnourished where, data on pockets where malnutrition is especially prevalent, and some understanding of why malnutrition is particularly bad in these areas. After the surveys, our CNEs, who are really the foot soldiers in RMF’s battle against childhood malnutrition, will know exactly where to focus their efforts and which families are most in need of nutrition education, support, and follow up.

These baseline surveys will also be extremely important for monitoring the success of our program. Our program includes stringent monitoring and evaluation of the initiative, with our CNEs submitting weekly reports on their activities in the field. By having a clear picture of where we started, we’ll be able to accurately measure the impact that RMF activities have had in our villages. This is important not only to prove our effectiveness to our donors, but also to gauge the effectiveness for government and other partners so that our program can be replicated throughout the country.

While in the villages, the Educators are also diagnosing and referring cases of Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM) to treatment facilities throughout the state. In India, cases of SAM are treated in Nutritional Rehabilitation Centers in district and block hospitals. Over 14 days, the children are given micro-nutrient rich therapeutic food at regular intervals of 2 hours under the close supervision of nurses and doctors. The child’s parent, usually the mother, is also given tips on preparing nutritious food, sanitary preparation of food to prevent illness, and guidance on correct breastfeeding. So far the CNEs have referred dozens of children to the centers for care.




Over the past week I met with every district team to get a sense of how the surveys are going in the villages. All of the women were pretty positive, but also shared some of their concerns and difficulties with me, and each other. Actually, I didn’t have that much to say, or much of a chance to say anything at all. By sitting in a room together, and realizing that their peers shared many of the problems they had faced individually, all of the CNEs engaged in problem solving discussions without little guidance. When a problem was raised by one woman that another had faced, and solved, everyone took notes on the new strategies and enthusiastically applied it to their own difficulties. The hardest part of the training process was predicting the nearly infinite local problems that would hamper the surveys, however, team-building exercises such as role-playing gave them some of the tools they would need to handle situations in the field. Combining these skills with on-the ground experience, and conversations about lessons learned with each other, has empowered our CNE’s even more.

Building off of each other, and combining the vast array of talents and backgrounds of our team is the cornerstone of our “Eradicate Malnutrition” program. As we begin the intervention phase of our program we are all confident that we are about to affect some real change in an area deeply in need of it. Our confidence will be tested, however, as the job ahead of us is a daunting one.

3 comments:

  1. Hello, I am a PhD student from India studying in the UK, on the subject of undernutrition, and am seriously considering on MP as a field work site... I am ofcourse aware of the severity and urgency of the problem of undernutrition in the tribal belts... or MP and other central Indian belts

    but had a question to ask of your practical experience in MP...

    in places such as Shivpuri and Guna, which have smaller tribal concentrations, but have been focus areas for UNICEF NRC's I was wondering are most of the children admitted from tribal communitites or even from other marginalised communities? (ofcourse NRC's are needed in many tribal belts where they are not currently present) In other more mixed districts such as Badwani which has significant non-tribal populations as well, do you find that undernutrition, and especially its acute forms is high even among non tribal communities and SC's?

    thanks a lot, I was looking to study both tribal and non-tribal contexts within a district for my PhD, and this will be useful to know...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Caitlin,

    I'm a journalist in Delhi with The New York Times. Can you shoot me an email? Thanks.
    Jim Yardley
    jimyard@nytimes.com

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello
    Great work and very interesting observations! I will, together with colleagues, soon carry out a survey on political tolarance in MP, perhaps in some of the areas you work in. Feel free to contact us:
    http://toledo.statsvet.uu.se/
    Best
    Sten Widmalm

    ReplyDelete