Kumar Praveen, Sinha Rajesh K, Arora Srishti, Sarwal Rakesh, Sultana Farida, Daniel Abner, Sriswan Raja, Kokane Arun M, Kiran Asha K, Goel Anil K, Suman R L, Jaiswal Anil K, Prabhu Sanjay, Seth Anju, Laxmaiya Avula, Rawat Ashok K, Modi Bivash, Thakur Rinky, de Wagt Arjan
Department of Paediatrics, Lady Hardinge Medical College and Assoc. Kalawati Saran Children's Hospital, New Delhi, India.
National Centre of Excellence for SAM Management, Kalawati Saran Children's Hospital, New Delhi, India.
Indian J Community Med. 2023 Jan-Feb;48(1):7-11. doi: 10.4103/ijcm.ijcm_205_22. Epub 2023 Feb 1.
High burden of acute malnutrition among children less than 5 years is a major public health problem in India. A "Two-days National Consultation on Addressing Acute Malnutrition" was organized to gather experiences and evidence from 13 states of India on prevention and management of acute malnutrition among children and documenting viewpoints from experts and government counterparts on the same. The consultation centered around five key themes of addressing acute malnutrition; 1) capacity building, 2) strengthening screening, 3) nutritional care of wasting, 4) tracking progress, and 5) scale-up. The paper highlights the experiences and key recommendations around the above key themes. It emerged that there is a need to further accelerate the efforts toward strengthening existing platforms and services to address acute malnutrition among children. Regular trainings of the frontline workers, increased convergence, regular monitoring, and continued service delivery during the pandemic should be undertaken for better outcomes.