Title: Preventing Malnutrition in Children
1Preventing Malnutrition in Children
- Dr. JP Dadhich MD,FNNF,PGD-DN
- National Coordinator,
- Breastfeeding Promotion Network of India (BPNI)
- Workshop on Nursing Management of Newborn and
Young Children - The Trained Nurses Association of India
- August 8, 2011
2Outline
- What is Nutrition?
- What is Malnutrition?
- Situation of Malnutrition in India
- What leads to Malnutrition?
- Why it is important to address Malnutrition?
- How Malnutrition can be prevented?
3What Is Nutrition?
- The act or process of nourishing or being
nourished Specifically the sum of the
processes by which an animal or plant takes in
and utilizes food substances
4Components of Optimal Nutrition
- Adequate and proper diet (food)
- Calories, Carbohydrates, Proteins, Fats, Minerals
and Vitamins - Good and loving care in a healthy environment
- Access to health care services
5Right Food for Infants
- Begin breastfeeding within an hour
- Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months
- Complementary feeding after six months
- Continued breastfeeding for 2 years or beyond
6 7Malnutrition
- Mal adjusted nutrition
- Malnutrition
- Under nutrition
- Over nutrition
double burden of malnutrition UN SCN
8Child
- Underweight
- Low weight-for-age at lt 2SD of the median value
of the NCHS/WHO reference - Weight for age is influenced by the height and
weight of a child - Therefore is a composite of stunting and wasting
- Makes interpretation of this indicator difficult
since both weight for age and height for age
reflect the long-term nutrition and heath
experience of the individual or population
9Child
- Wasting
- lt 2SD of median weight for height
- Severe lt 3SD
- Usually due to acute food shortage and/or severe
disease - Chronic dietary deficit or disease can also lead
to wasting - This indicator is used extensively in emergency
settings
10Child
- Chronic low intake leads to STUNTING
- Growth charts key indicators
- Linear growth
- lt2 SD from median value of international growth
reference for height stunting - lt3 SD severe stunting
- Poor diet and disease leads to shortness
- Know that nutrition, not heredity, is the cause
because of studies of better fed children in the
same culture and growth velocity when breastfed
11- Situation of Undernutrition in India
12Underweight Children Under Five Years of Age
(Millions)
India 57 m
South Asia Half the worlds underweight children
(World total 146 millions)
Progress for children A report card on
nutrition, UNICEF, May 2006
13Underweight U5 children ()
14Children Under 3 years Who are Underweight
(NFHS-3, 2005-2006)
- little change over seven years between NFHS 2 and
3
15Ranking by Children U-3 who are underweight
(NFHS-3)
Rank States of Underweight
1 Madhya Pradesh 60.0
5 Gujarat 44.6
6 Uttar Pradesh 42.4
11 Haryana 39.6
21 Delhi 26.1
26 Punjab 24.9
INDIA 42.5
16Nutritional Status of Children NFHS 3
(Underweight - by new WHO Growth Standards)
17Undernutrition occurs in wealthy household also !
18- What leads to Malnutrition?
19Infant Nutritional Status
- Influenced by
- Inadequate feeding
- Frequent infections
- Inadequate food
- Health
- Care
- Defined as the behaviors and practices of
caregivers to provide the food, health care,
stimulation, and emotional support necessary for
childrens health growth and development
20Why Malnutrition Sets in
- Poor feeding practices during first year like
- Delayed start of breastfeeding
- Lack of exclusive breastfeeding for first six
months - Increasing bottle- feeding/artificial feeding
- Delayed or early start of solid complementary
feeding.
21Breastfeeding and Infant Nutritional Status
- Babies who breast feed usually have better
nutritional status than those who do not - Infant does not compete with food supply for
family - Breast milk is a clean food supply
- Breast milk has immunologic benefits so decreases
disease in this way, too
22Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Adapted from UNICEF
23Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
24Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Household Food Security
Underlying Causes
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
25Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Environ. Health, Hygiene Sanitation
Household Food Security
Underlying Causes
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
26Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Environ. Health, Hygiene Sanitation
Household Food Security
Underlying Causes
Care of Mother and Child
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
27Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Immediate Causes
Health
Diet
Environ. Health, Hygiene Sanitation
Household Food Security
Underlying Causes
Care of Mother and Child
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
28Conceptual Framework of Malnutrition
Manifestations
Nutritional Status
Immediate Causes
Health
Diet
Environ. Health, Hygiene Sanitation
Household Food Security
Underlying Causes
Care of Mother and Child
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
29Functional Consequences Mortality, Morbidity,
Lost Productivity, etc.
Consequences
Manifestations
Nutritional Status
Immediate Causes
Health
Diet
Environ. Health, Hygiene Sanitation
Household Food Security
Underlying Causes
Care of Mother and Child
Human, Economic, and Institutional Resources
Political and Ideological Structure
Root Causes
Ecological Conditions
Potential Resources
Adapted from UNICEF
30- Why it is important to prevent malnutrition?
31WHO 2009. Global health risks mortality and
burden of disease attributable to selected major
risks.
32Importance of preventing Malnutrition
Child Survival
Growth
Development
33Importance of preventing Malnutrition
- Improved schooling quantity and quality
- Cost of treating Malnutrition is 27 times
higher than preventing it
Source ASCI, 1997
34- How Malnutrition can be prevented?
35Priority health and nutrition interventions under
2 years
Vit A
Immunizations
ORS/Diarrhoea
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Complementary Feeding and Continued Breastfeeding
50
Exclusive Breastfeeding
37
30
Babies die here
Supplementary Food
Breastfeeding is everyone's yet no ones
responsibility
36Effect of nutrition-related interventions on
stunting in 36 countries
LSMCU 2008
37Specialized IYCF Counseling
-
- One to one or group counseling as a service
delivery - Antenatal and Postnatal
- Specialized trained additional staff at village,
block and district level
38Growth Monitoring
- Growth Monitoring Measure weight and length
periodically and interpret by plotting in growth
curves - Investigate causes of poor growth Dietary
history evaluate for any illness. - Counsel mother/caregivers on growth, feeding and
caring practices
39Feeding Practices (First Year)
40Complementary feeding Indicators (NFHS 3)
Indicators for assessing IYCF practices. WHO,
UNICEF 2010
41Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices
NFHS 3
Breast fed BF3 food groups2-3 times/d
Non Breast fed Milk 4 food groups 4 times/d
42Appropriate Complementary Feeding
- Timely Additional food introduced when need for
energy and nutrients exceeds that provided by BF - Adequate Should provide sufficient energy,
protein, and micronutrients - Properly Fed Active feeding method and proper
frequency according to age - Safe Should be hygienically prepared, stored and
fed
43Conclusion
- Malnutrition has a direct link with child
survival and development - Malnutrition can be prevented with simple
interventions - Optimal Infant and young child feeding is the
cornerstone
44Thank You