India’s Persistent Stunting Crisis

20 Aug 2025

India’s Persistent Stunting Crisis

Despite seven years of POSHAN Abhiyaan India has only shown marginal improvement in reducing stunting and missed its target to reduce stunting among children.

What is Stunting?

  • Definition: A stunted child is too short for his or her age due to chronic or recurrent malnutrition.
    • It is a key indicator of child health and nutrition outcomes.

POSHAN Tracker

  • The Poshan Tracker is a mobile-based application developed under the POSHAN Abhiyaan (National Nutrition Mission) to improve the nutritional status of children under 6 years, adolescent girls, pregnant women, and lactating mothers.
  • It serves as a key tool for real-time monitoring and tracking of Anganwadi Centers (AWCs), Anganwadi Workers (AWWs), and beneficiaries, ensuring efficient service delivery and last-mile tracking of nutrition support. 

Impact of Stunting

  • Stunting in early life has adverse functional consequences on the child.
  • Some of those consequences include poor cognition and educational performance, low adult wages, lost productivity, etc.
  • When it is accompanied by excessive weight gain later in childhood it leads to an increased risk of nutrition-related chronic diseases in adult life.
  • India’s Status
    • In 2016, 38.4% of children under five were stunted.
    • However, POSHAN Tracker data (June 2025) shows 37% stunted children, indicating minimal progress.

POSHAN Abhiyaan (National Nutrition Mission)

  • POSHAN Abhiyaan is India’s flagship programme to improve nutritional outcomes for children, pregnant women, and lactating mothers.
  • It was launched to address under-nutrition, stunting, anemia, and low birth weight through convergence and technology-driven monitoring.
  • Launch: March 2018.
  • Targets under POSHAN Abhiyaan
    • Stunting reduction by at least 2% per annum.
    • Under-nutrition reduction by 2% per annum.
    • Anaemia reduction by 3% per annum.
    • Low birth weight reduction by 2% per annum.
  • The ambitious goal under “Mission 25 by 2022” was to reduce stunting from 38.4% (NFHS-4) to 25% by 2022.

Phases of Implementation

  • The mission was designed to be implemented in three phases from 2017-18 to 2019-20.
  • It involved gradual scaling up of interventions supported by the World Bank-assisted ICDS Systems Strengthening and Nutrition Improvement Project (ISSNIP) to all districts by 2022.

Mission POSHAN 2.0

  • In 2021, the government merged POSHAN Abhiyaan, Anganwadi Services, and the Scheme for Adolescent Girls into Mission Saksham Anganwadi and POSHAN 2.0 (Mission POSHAN 2.0).

Objectives of POSHAN 2.0

  • To address malnutrition in children, adolescent girls, pregnant women, and lactating mothers.
  • To improve maternal nutrition, infant and young child feeding practices, and treatment of moderate and severe acute malnutrition (MAM/SAM).
  • To promote wellness through AYUSH, diet diversity, food fortification, and use of millets.
  • To create a sustainable system of health and nutrition through community awareness and local food-based practices.

Key Components

  • Nutritional Interventions: Supplementary nutrition through fortified rice (rolled out across all States/UTs from FY 2021-22).
    • Mandatory inclusion of millets in Anganwadi meals at least once a week.
    • Promotion of dietary diversification with dark green leafy vegetables, lentils, and vitamin-C rich fruits.
  • ICT & Governance: Introduction of the Poshan Tracker (1st March 2021) for real-time monitoring of nutrition service delivery.
    • Grievance Redressal Cell and National Poshan Helpline for beneficiary feedback.
    • Aadhaar verification of over 90% of registered beneficiaries.
  • Community Outreach: Large-scale social and behaviour change communication (SBCC) campaigns.
    • Celebration of Rashtriya Poshan Maah (September) and Poshan Pakhwada (March) for community sensitization.

Achievements

  • The mission rolled out across 36 States/UTs and 730 districts, including 112 Aspirational Districts.
  • Establishment of over 4 lakh Poshan Vatikas (nutrition gardens) across India.
  • Integration of Poshan Tracker with Reproductive and Child Health (RCH) portal for improved coordination.
  • Recognition of best practices like Mission Sampurna Poshan (Telangana), Mera Bachcha Abhiyaan (Madhya Pradesh), and Project Sampoorna (Assam).

Progress in Nutrition Indicators (NFHS-5, 2019-21)

  • Stunting reduced from 38.4% (NFHS-4) to 35.5% (NFHS-5).
  • Wasting reduced from 21% to 19.3%.
  • Underweight prevalence declined from 35.7% to 32.1%.

Reasons for Persistent Stunting Problem

  • Maternal Health and Teenage Pregnancies: Nearly half of stunted children are small at birth, showing a direct link to maternal health.
    • As of 2019–21, 7% of women aged 15–19 had begun childbearing.
    • Adolescent mothers often face poor nutrition and inadequate capacity to care for infants.
  • Education Gap: Data shows that  46% of children born to mothers with no schooling were stunted, compared to 26% among mothers with 12+ years of schooling.
    • Educated mothers are more likely to access healthcare, delay early pregnancies, and ensure better nutrition.
  • Increasing Caesarean Deliveries and low breastfeeding  : C-section deliveries increased from 9% in 2005–06 to 22% in 2021.
    • Surgical births disrupt immediate breastfeeding and deprive babies of colostrum.
    • Only 64% of infants under six months are exclusively breastfed, with sharp divides between working-class and salaried women.
  • Poor Diet Diversity: Indian diets, especially among poor households, are carbohydrate-heavy with limited protein or micronutrients. For example, in tribal communities, diets are dominated by rice and  dal is consumed as little as once a month.
    • Only 11% of children under two met the standard for a minimum acceptable diet (2019–21).
  • Maternal and Child Anaemia: In 2019–21, 57% of women aged 15–49 and 67% of children under five were anaemic.
    • Anaemia in mothers contributes to low birth weight and poor growth outcomes in children.
  • Poor Sanitation and Unsafe Water: 19% of Indian households still practiced open defecation in 2019–21.
    • Exposure to unsafe water and poor sanitation leads to frequent infections, worsening malnutrition.
    • Malnourished children fall sick more often, further lowering nutrient absorption, creating a vicious cycle of infection and malnutrition.

Way Forward

  • Strengthening Maternal Health: Focus on delaying teenage pregnancies and addressing maternal anaemia. Expand coverage of antenatal care and nutrition supplementation.
  • Promoting Education for Girls: Ensure higher educational attainment among women to break the vicious cycle of deprivation.
  • Nutrition Diversity and Access: Scale up access to protein and micronutrient-rich foods in public nutrition schemes.
    • Improve minimum acceptable diet coverage for children under two years.
  • Supporting Breastfeeding Mothers: Expand maternity leave and workplace breastfeeding support, particularly for informal workers.
    • Raise awareness about the importance of exclusive breastfeeding.
  • Sanitation and Water Access: Accelerate efforts to eradicate open defecation and provide safe drinking water. Improve interventions targeting gut health and infection prevention.
  • Multi-Sectoral Strategy: Address stunting as a multi-dimensional problem involving health, education, sanitation, and nutrition.
  • Better Implementation: Strengthen monitoring under POSHAN Abhiyaan and Poshan Tracker to ensure accountability.

Conclusion

Stunting in India reflects deep-rooted systemic deprivations from maternal health and education gaps to poor sanitation and nutrition. Without tackling these multi-sectoral challenges, India risks perpetuating an intergenerational cycle of malnutrition, poverty, and limited human capital development.

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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
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Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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