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Must read: The child malnutrition myth

Adnan Faruqi

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Must read: The child malnutrition myth

n the early 2000s, when the 55th (1999-2000) round of the expenditure survey showed a surprisingly sharp decline in poverty over its predecessor survey, the reform critics descended on the finding like a ton of bricks. Their critique eventually led to a healthy debate, important new research and eventual downward revision in poverty reduction numbers by the reform advocates themselves.

In total contrast, almost no objections have been raised to the absurdly high estimates of malnutrition in India trumpeted by journalists, NGOs, politicians and international institutions within and outside India.

Not a day goes by without some TV channel or newspaper running the headline that the world's fastest growing economy suffers worse malnutrition than sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).


In terms of vital statistics such as life expectancy at birth, infant mortality and maternal mortality, India fares better than all except one or two of the SSA countries with comparable or lower per capita incomes.

So it is puzzling that, according to World Health Organisation (WHO) statistics, it suffers from higher proportion of underweight children than every one of the 48 SSA countries and higher rate of stunting than all but seven of them. Such countries as the Central African Republic, Chad and Lesotho, which have life expectancy at birth of just 48 years compared with India's 65, have lower rates of stunting and underweight.

If you still do not believe the absurdity of these malnutrition numbers, compare Kerala and Senegal. Kerala exhibits vital statistics edging towards those in the developed countries: life expec-tancy of 74 years, infant mortality rate of 12 per 1,000 live births and maternal mortality rate of 95 per 1,00,000 live births. The corresponding figures for Senegal are far worse at 62, 51 and 410, respectively.

But nutrition statistics say that Kerala has 25% stunted children compared to 20% of Senegal and 23% underweight children relative to 14.5% of the latter. In Punjab, which has a life expec-tancy of 70 years and is the breadbasket and milk dairy of India, 37% of children are stunted and 25% underweight.


To make sense of this nonsense, we must look at how the stunting (and underweight) rates are calculated. To classify a child of a given age and sex as stunted, we must compare his height to a pre-specified standard. :hitwall:

The WHO sets this standard. In the early 2000s, it collected a sample of 8,440 children representing a population of healthy breastfed infants and young children in Brazil, Ghana, India, Norway, Oman and the United States. This "reference" population provided the basis for setting the standards.


As expected, when comparing children of a given age and sex even within this healthy sample, heights and weights differed. Therefore, some criterion was required to identify stunting and underweight among these children.

In each group defined by age and sex, the WHO defined the bottom 2.14% of the children according to height as stunted. The height of the child at 2.14 percentile then became the standard against which children of the same age and sex in other populations were to be compared to identify stunting. A similar procedure applied to weight.


The key assumption underlying this methodology is that if properly nourished , all child populations would produce outcomes similar to the WHO reference population with just 2.14% of the children at the bottom stunted and underweight. Higher rates of stunting would indicate above normal malnutrition. So the million-dollar question is whether this assumption really holds for the population of children from which the estimate of half of Indian children being stunted is derived?

As it happens, the answer to the question can be found buried in a 2009 study published by the government of India. The latest estimate for stunting in India has been derived from the third National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3). The report draws a highly restricted sample from the fuller NFHS-3 sample consisting of 'elite' children defined as those 'whose mothers and fathers have secondary or higher education, who live in households with electricity, a refrigerator, a TV and an automobile or truck, who did not have diarrhoea or a cough or fever in the two weeks preceding the survey, who were exclusively breastfed if they were less than five months old, and who received complementary foods if they were at least five months old'.

If the assumption that proper nutrition guarantees the same outcome as the WHO reference population is true, the proportion of stunted children in this sample should be 2.14%.

But the study reports this proportion to be above 15%! The assumption is violated by a wide margin.


The implication of this and other facts is that Indian children are genetically smaller on average. A competing hypothesis - which says that nutrition improvements may take several generations - fails to explain how, without a genetic advantage, the far poorer SSA countries, which lag behind India in almost all vital statistics, could have pulled so far ahead of India in child nutrition.

Moreover, the trend of the stunting proportions based on WHO standards, available for India since the late 1970s, would suggest that nearly all those born in the 1950s or before - the writer included - are stunted!
:hitwall:

Either way, the statistic that half of Indian children today are stunted needs to be viewed far more sceptically and investigated more deeply. The right treatment requires a right diagnosis.

The writer is a professor at Columbia University.

The child malnutrition myth - Times Of India


Appeal to trolls try to understand the issue its not about India its about the wrong methods of calculating malnutrition in the world be it India or pakistan or china.
 
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Thank You Adnan..Also I don't understand how come India has more poverty than Sub Saharan Africa when the Govt is distributing rice for free.
 
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Interesting article and I can totally agree that "standards" set by a body like WHO can skew results.

Differing populations have differing genetic profiles. Some countries trend towards very tall and heavier, others towards short stature. Being short generally doesn't mean you are malnourished; it can in some cases, but in the bulk, no.

I am a fairly tall man at 6' 3" or 190 cm. I do a lot of traveling to Central America. I watch my airplane unload, and 90% of the women's heads barely reach my sternum. The people there are generally mixed Spanish/Native American blood, and they are short. No other way to put it... Especially the adult women tend towards being really short. Note I say short and not malnourished or petit, because they tend towards being thick and stocky.

It's a bit odd, but they are entirely healthy and normal. So if WHO measures a child at age 4 who will be 150 cm at maturity, they may declare the child to be malnourished, when they are not.
 
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Adnan, thanks for an interesting read. I've often grappled with this question myself, and this informative read is quite useful. Thanks.

In any case our health indicators should improve more, but the really stunted ones are those who would use such data for making petty insults ;)
 
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Thank You Adnan..Also I don't understand how come India has more poverty than Sub Saharan Africa when the Govt is distributing rice for free.

Its very simple.

1. First we have to admit there is poverty though not at the extent of it made out.

2. There is corruption in distribution still majority of part reaches out to the people.
Now, ur question's answer:

3. Tell me what will one say if I ask him:

I will give you free home + free education + free food + subsidized food + free medicines + free legal aid + free clothes.

Only if he is POOR.

Obviously that person will say he is poor just to get the benefits. Because our govt. provides all these to people who get registered as poor people

4. Just visit any village:

a.They will show you their = true routine normally

b. If you are relative or want to have Marriage relation = they will pose as rich or well to do

c. If you pose as a jounalist or govt. employee who are on survey = they will pose as a poor (villagers are very cunning they know that if they pose as a poor and victim they will get benefit) They knows that if they get enrolled in the list of poor then extra and free incentives will benefit them.

d. And even in a city if a tax official or govt. department ask me tell us "Adnan" what's ur income I will lie to hide my income so that i can save tax or don't get into their attention. :wave:
 
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^^^
This "malnutrition" bit just means different things to different people, and some of those things are simply meaningless. For instance (some years ago) I had an opportunity to travel to a village in interior rural India to help set up the village school. I saw the workmen there and thought them to be "malnourished" ( I'd even shared their meals) till I saw their physical output to be more than mine.

While in my neighborhood, I see big N.American kids who may not be considered to be "malnourished" in any way to be utterly obese and simply heading for health crises. And they will even longer to suffer through it all.

So what defines "malnutrition"?
 
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Its very simple.

1. First we have to admit there is poverty though not at the extent of it made out.

2. There is corruption in distribution still majority of part reaches out to the people.
Now, ur question's answer:

3. Tell me what will one say if I ask him:

I will give you free home + free education + free food + subsidized food + free medicines + free legal aid + free clothes.

Only if he is POOR.

Obviously that person will say he is poor just to get the benefits. Because our govt. provides all these to people who get registered as poor people

4. Just visit any village:

a.They will show you their = true routine normally

b. If you are relative or want to have Marriage relation = they will pose as rich or well to do

c. If you pose as a jounalist or govt. employee who are on survey = they will pose as a poor (villagers are very cunning they know that if they pose as a poor and victim they will get benefit) They knows that if they get enrolled in the list of poor then extra and free incentives will benefit them.

d. And even in a city if a tax official or govt. department ask me tell us "Adnan" what's ur income I will lie to hide my income so that i can save tax or don't get into their attention. :wave:

True I know many 'poor' who live in well built houses and owning 2 wheelers. Hope the Aaadhar program once completed, will give a true idea of Indian poverty among other things.
 
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indian people are genetically just of a smaller stature and tend towards the lean, obviously not all there are exceptions, but that is what they are.
 
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indian people are genetically just of a smaller stature and tend towards the lean, obviously not all there are exceptions, but that is what they are.

Smaller stature=smaller amount of food needed. :enjoy:
 
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Interesting article and I can totally agree that "standards" set by a body like WHO can skew results.

Differing populations have differing genetic profiles. Some countries trend towards very tall and heavier, others towards short stature. Being short generally doesn't mean you are malnourished; it can in some cases, but in the bulk, no.

I am a fairly tall man at 6' 3" or 190 cm. I do a lot of traveling to Central America. I watch my airplane unload, and 90% of the women's heads barely reach my sternum. The people there are generally mixed Spanish/Native American blood, and they are short. No other way to put it... Especially the adult women tend towards being really short. Note I say short and not malnourished or petit, because they tend towards being thick and stocky.

It's a bit odd, but they are entirely healthy and normal. So if WHO measures a child at age 4 who will be 150 cm at maturity, they may declare the child to be malnourished, when they are not.

I think India's genetics should not be looked on as a homogenous population, but rather as a very mixed population with large height standard deviations. The same thing for the US.

East Asians are famous for being short yet a report by Alvalon, a fashion supplier, noted that through microwave scans of 20000+ people throughout China and the US, the average height of females did not differ (both being 5'4) and the average height of males differed by only 1 US inch (5'9 in US, 5'8 in China).

The impression of people being taller in the US could be because of greater standard deviations in height in the US due to significant genetic mixing. I'd actually be interested in a study that correlates height to relative income. Same for India; there may be disproportionate amounts of tall people and short people in India, but bad nutrition shifts the entire curve downwards so more fall behind the stunting values.
 
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