Shillong : Meghalaya Additional Chief Secretary, Shri Y. Tsering inaugurated the State Level Consultation on “Accelerating Progress towards Good Nutrition for All in Meghalaya” on 9th August, 2016 at the State Convention Centre, Shillong. The meeting was organised by the Social Welfare Department, State Resource Centre for Women (SRCW), Government of Meghalaya in collaboration with the Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) and the India Institute of Public Health Shillong (IIPHS).
The meeting was organised to discuss implications of the India Health Report: Nutrition 2015 (IHR). Meghalaya has made some improvements in health and nutrition status of women and children, but the progress is slow. For instance, Meghalaya (43.8 percent) and Assam (40.6 percent) have the most number of stunted children under the age of five in the Northeast. The rates are above the national average rate of 38.7 percent. Being stunted means that these children are not fulfilling their potential. Their brains and immune systems are compromised. The IHR cites open defecation and inadequate hand washing as reasons for poor health among children, leading to malnourishment.
Presenting the keynote address at the event, Shri Y Tsering emphasised the importance of focusing on quality care and services and not just the numbers. He said that “holistic, state-level actions are needed to address nutrition in Meghalaya. There is a need to look at food habits in rural areas and create awareness on the importance of nutritious food, healthy lifestyle, education for women and girls and water, sanitation and hygiene practices. Education plays an important role in shaping the perceptions of children, therefore, educators play a key role in spreading health literacy.”
Shri Tsering also released the Meghalaya dashboard – a report with data specific to Meghalaya’s nutritional indicators.
The Mission Director, State Resource Centre for Women, Ms. Ivyreen Warjri spoke about key initiatives of the Government to address under-nutrition. Ms Warjri highlighted the importance of women’s empowerment for achieving better nutrition and health outcomes in Meghalaya. She also urged to give equal importance to nutrition just as families and the government gives priority to education of the students. She also appealed to stop open defecation which is one of the prime reasons for contagious diseases. She was highly positive of the improvement of Nutritional Index of Meghalaya in the coming months.
Professor Ramanan Laxminarayan, Distinguished Professor, PHFI co-author on the India Health Report research said, “In this inaugural India Health Report (IHR), we focused on the topic of child stunting and malnutrition. The data has highlighted that if the population of stunted children in India were a single country, it would be the ninth-largest country in the world.”
Professor Sandra Albert, Director, IIPH-S highlighted that often our people do not suffer from overt hunger as they eat diets rich in carbohydrates (e.g. rice) but they remain malnourished due to lack of proteins and micronutrients.
Presenting data on Meghalaya’s nutrition status, Dr Neha Raykar, Lead Economist, PHFI and author on the IHR said that “strategies that accelerate improvements in child stunting in Meghalaya will need to focus on health of adolescent girls and women as well as their educational and socio-economic status. Moreover, there are considerable disparities and inequities in nutritional outcomes and their drivers across districts of Meghalaya that state programmes need to address”.
IHR provides easy-to-understand data infographics for Meghalaya that give a comprehensive view of nutrition and its multiple determinants. It also looks at disparities in these indicators across geographical regions, socio-economic classes, and demographic groups and helps identify strategic choices for policy-making at the state level.
An eminent group of panelists with representatives from Social Welfare Department, Department of Health and Family Welfare, Department of Education, Food and Nutrition Board and NIPCCD discussed how the current rate of improvement in nutritional status of children in Meghalaya can be accelerated further and will identify priorities and multi-sectoral pathways towards good nutrition for all. The panelists suggested for improving inter-sectoral coordination and creating synergy by focusing on key underlying determinants of nutrition: education, water and sanitation, gender and equity.
The meeting was attended by 120 participants including Government officials from Departments of Health and Family Welfare, Women and Child Development, Education, Tribal Welfare, Social Welfare, non-governmental organisations working on health and nutrition issues, academic institutions and development partners. (MIPR)
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