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‘India
has enormous under-nutrition and over-nutrition problems’
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| Dr
Lawrence J Haddad |
sDr
Stuart Gillespie |
Dr
Lawrence J Haddad, director, food consumption and
nutrition division, International Food Policy Research
Institute (IFPRI), Washington DC, and Dr Stuart Gillespie,
a senior research fellow at the same institute were
in India recently to participate in the 13th session
of the UN Committee on Nutrition, hosted by M S Swaminathan
Research Foundation in Chennai. Dr Haddad’s research
interests, which are widely published, include the nutrition
and poverty consequences of gender differences in access
to resources; how decisions are made within families
and the role of individual status and the role of community
participation in the performance of poverty programmes.
Dr Gillespie’s research interests include the process
of nutrition-relevant policy change, the role of capacity
in conditioning programme success, the operationalisation
of a human rights-based approach to nutrition, and the
linkages between HIV/Aids and food and nutrition security.
The modest authors of “The Double Burden of Malnutrition
in Asia—Causes, Consequences and Solutions” took some
time off their busy schedule to speak with G Sankar
Narayanan. Excerpts:
What
inspired you to conduct nutritional studies of Asia?
Asia has the largest number of malnourished children
in the world. The Double Burden of Malnutrition in Asia
was inspired by the massive challenge that this situation
currently poses for Asia. It describes the main driving
forces behind the groundswell of under-nutrition, while
shedding light on the emerging double burden of co-existing
underweight and overweight, and the linkages between
these two
different forms of malnutrition.
Can you elaborate on the double burden
concept?
There are two types of nutritional problems - one is
under-nutrition and another is over-nutrition. Emphasis
should be given not only to food but also to care and
health, the reason being that even if children in the
age group of 0-2 years are able to get food, they may
have mothers who do not have enough time to pay attention
to their children. Similarly, if there is no health-guaranteeing
environment, and children suffer from diarrhoeal diseases,
no amount of food
will help prevent malnutrition.
Over-nutrition, on the other hand, means either too
many calories or the wrong types of calories such as
saturated fats or highly processed sugar that lead to
obesity, vascular diseases, etc. Many developing countries
have under-nutrition and those in Europe and North America
have over- nutrition problems. There is this in-between
category with countries like India that still have an
enormous amount of under-nutrition and significant over-nutrition
problems. In India, for instance, around 50 per cent
of its children under the age of five are undernourished
or malnourished. But in urban areas, the over-nutrition
problem is shooting up, thanks to the change in lifestyle
and food habits. As a result, health systems are under
huge stress.
The book argues that there is a connection between
over-nutrition and under-nutrition. Can you explain?
Yes, there is a link that is not very obvious. When
there is malnutrition, there is a higher level of lower
birth rate. One in three babies born in India weigh
significantly low because their mothers are undernourished.
Some low-weight babies die and some survive and those
who survive adapt to malnutrition and scarcity. That
is, the biological adaptation is programmed to maximise
every calorie the body gets. This adaptation that helped
a malnourished baby survive suddenly turns out to be
a mal-adaptation when the baby becomes an adult. The
adult, who was malnourished in the past, gains extra
weight even when he takes only normal amount of food
because of the biological
adaptation.
Whats your take on the nutrition programmes
in India?
The national food security may be politically important
for India, but it should understand that the household
food security is even more important. If there is no
food in village households, it really doesnt matter
if the national food security is commendable.
What is also important is getting the food to the child.
Even if the child takes the food, his body cannot absorb
it unless you provide a clean environment and water.
For a country like India, infant growth is as important
as economic growth and the politicians should understand
that.
The first question your Prime Minister should ask his
minister is how are the children growing?
and not how is the economy growing?
umgsankar@yahoo.com
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