A Critical Analysis of NFHS-4, NFHS-5 and NFHS-6 through the Lens of ICDS, Supplementary Nutrition Programme and Social Inequality
Ramphal Kataria
Abstract
The release of the National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6), conducted during 2023–24, provides an important opportunity to reassess India's developmental trajectory in the domains of nutrition, health, education, gender relations, and social welfare. The survey reveals that India has made substantial progress in maternal and child health, institutional deliveries, immunisation, women's education, financial inclusion, and health insurance coverage. Yet, persistent levels of child malnutrition, anaemia, dietary inadequacy, and emerging burdens of obesity and non-communicable diseases underscore the limitations of economic growth as a standalone instrument of human development.
This paper critically analyses NFHS-4, NFHS-5, and NFHS-6 with particular emphasis on Haryana, a state often regarded as one of India's economically advanced regions. The study interrogates the apparent paradox between rising prosperity and persistent nutritional deficits. It argues that while programmes such as the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and the Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP) have contributed significantly to reducing chronic undernutrition, structural inequalities rooted in class, caste, gender, and geography continue to shape nutritional outcomes.
The paper examines the relationship between poverty and malnutrition, the role of maternal education, the condition of the girl child, patterns of child marriage and domestic violence, and the impact of women's employment on household health outcomes. Drawing upon scientific evidence and NFHS data, it demonstrates that nutrition is not merely a function of food availability but of social justice, gender equality, access to healthcare, education, sanitation, and economic security.
The findings suggest that Haryana's performance exceeds national averages in several indicators; however, emerging concerns such as increasing wasting, rising underweight prevalence, declining exclusive breastfeeding, and growing metabolic disorders demand urgent policy attention. The paper concludes that the future of India's demographic dividend depends less on economic growth alone and more on the creation of equitable systems that ensure every child, woman, and family access to the basic conditions necessary for healthy development.
I. Introduction: Reading Development through the NFHS
The history of modern development is, in many ways, the history of a society's ability to nourish its people. Nations may measure progress through gross domestic product, industrial output, infrastructure, or technological advancement, but the true measure of development lies in the health and capabilities of their citizens. A child who grows to her full physical and cognitive potential, a woman who survives pregnancy without risk, and a family that can access nutritious food and healthcare constitute the real indicators of societal advancement.
In India, few datasets capture these dimensions as comprehensively as the National Family Health Survey (NFHS). Conducted periodically since the early 1990s, the survey has evolved into the country's most authoritative source of information on health, nutrition, fertility, gender relations, and socio-economic conditions. The publication of NFHS-6 (2023–24) marks an important milestone because it enables scholars and policymakers to assess nearly a decade of changes since NFHS-4 (2015–16).
The significance of NFHS extends beyond statistics. Every percentage point in the survey represents millions of lives. A reduction in stunting means millions of children escaping lifelong cognitive deficits. An increase in institutional deliveries signifies thousands of mothers surviving childbirth. A decline in child marriage reflects expanded opportunities for adolescent girls. Thus, NFHS is not merely a survey of indicators; it is a social biography of India.
The latest survey reveals a nation in transition. Fertility rates have stabilised at replacement level, educational attainment has improved, women's financial inclusion has expanded dramatically, and healthcare access has widened. At the same time, persistent malnutrition, widespread anaemia, and rising lifestyle diseases indicate that developmental gains remain uneven.
These contradictions become particularly visible in Haryana. The state occupies a unique position within India's developmental landscape. It is among the country's wealthiest agricultural economies and enjoys high per capita income, substantial urbanisation, and proximity to the National Capital Region. Yet Haryana continues to face significant nutritional challenges, especially among children and women.
The central question therefore emerges: Why does malnutrition persist even in economically prosperous societies?
The answer lies in understanding that nutrition is not simply about food. It is about access, power, gender relations, education, healthcare, sanitation, social protection, and economic security. Hunger and malnutrition are social phenomena before they are biological conditions.
This paper argues that the findings of NFHS-6 must be interpreted through a broader socio-economic framework. Such an approach allows us to understand not only what has changed, but why certain indicators improve while others stagnate or deteriorate.
"Malnutrition is rarely the consequence of empty granaries; it is more often the consequence of unequal societies."
II. Understanding NFHS: What Does the Survey Measure?
The NFHS is designed to assess the health and well-being of households across India through scientifically representative sampling techniques. Unlike administrative records, which often reflect programme outputs, NFHS captures actual outcomes experienced by households.
The survey investigates multiple dimensions of human development.
The first dimension concerns demographic characteristics. Age structure, fertility rates, marriage patterns, and household composition provide insights into population dynamics and future developmental challenges.
The second dimension relates to maternal and child health. Indicators such as antenatal care, institutional deliveries, immunisation coverage, postnatal care, and infant feeding practices reveal the effectiveness of public health systems.
The third dimension examines nutritional status. Measurements of height, weight, body mass index, anaemia, and dietary practices enable an assessment of undernutrition, overnutrition, and food insecurity.
The fourth dimension focuses on women's empowerment. Educational attainment, financial inclusion, participation in household decision-making, and ownership of assets help measure gender equality.
Finally, the survey includes information on domestic violence, tobacco use, alcohol consumption, diabetes, hypertension, and other emerging public health concerns.
Taken together, these indicators create a multidimensional portrait of human development.
The importance of NFHS lies in its ability to identify interconnections. A child may be malnourished not because food is unavailable but because the mother is anaemic. The mother may be anaemic because she lacks education, autonomy, or access to healthcare. These interlinked pathways make NFHS an invaluable tool for understanding the social determinants of health.
III. The Political Economy of Nutrition
Nutrition is often discussed as a technical issue involving calories, proteins, vitamins, and minerals. While these biological dimensions are important, nutrition is fundamentally a political and economic question.
The distribution of food in society reflects broader distributions of power, income, and opportunity.
Economists and social scientists have long argued that famines and nutritional deprivation are rarely caused solely by food shortages. Rather, they result from unequal access to available resources. Individuals may starve not because food does not exist but because they lack the economic means to acquire it.
This insight remains relevant in contemporary India.
The country produces sufficient food grains to feed its population. It is among the world's largest producers of wheat, rice, milk, fruits, and vegetables. Yet millions of children remain stunted, wasted, or underweight.
This paradox highlights the distinction between food availability and food access.
Food availability refers to the physical presence of food in markets and households. Food access refers to the ability of individuals to obtain nutritious food consistently and in adequate quantities.
The latter depends heavily on income, education, employment, social protection, and gender relations.
Poverty and Nutritional Outcomes
Poverty affects nutrition through multiple pathways.
Poor households often spend a large proportion of their income on food. However, limited purchasing power forces them to prioritise quantity over quality. As a result, diets become heavily dependent on cereals while lacking proteins, fruits, vegetables, and micronutrient-rich foods.
Children growing up in such environments may receive sufficient calories to survive but insufficient nutrients to thrive.
This phenomenon is commonly described as "hidden hunger."
Hidden hunger manifests through deficiencies of iron, zinc, vitamin A, folic acid, and other micronutrients. Such deficiencies impair immunity, reduce cognitive development, and increase susceptibility to disease.
The NFHS data repeatedly demonstrates that malnutrition is concentrated among economically vulnerable populations.
Children from poorer households are significantly more likely to be stunted, wasted, and underweight than children from wealthier households.
The relationship is not accidental.
Poverty influences housing conditions, sanitation facilities, drinking water quality, healthcare utilisation, maternal nutrition, and educational opportunities. Each of these factors contributes to child health outcomes.
Thus, malnutrition should be understood as an outcome of cumulative deprivation rather than merely inadequate food consumption.
Human Capital and Early Childhood Development
Modern economic theory increasingly recognises nutrition as an investment rather than a welfare expenditure.
Children who receive adequate nutrition during the first thousand days of life—from conception to two years of age—experience superior physical growth, cognitive development, and educational achievement.
The scientific evidence is unequivocal.
Malnutrition during early childhood reduces brain development, weakens neural connectivity, impairs memory formation, and lowers future productivity.
The consequences extend throughout the life course.
A malnourished child is more likely to perform poorly in school. Reduced educational attainment lowers employment opportunities and earnings in adulthood. Lower earnings increase the probability that the next generation will also experience nutritional deprivation.
This intergenerational transmission of poverty represents one of the most significant barriers to social mobility.
Nutrition therefore functions as a bridge connecting public health, education, and economic development.
Investment in child nutrition generates returns not only in improved health outcomes but also in higher productivity, stronger economic growth, and reduced inequality.
"The first thousand days of life determine the opportunities available during the next thousand weeks."
Why Haryana Matters
Haryana presents an important case study because it challenges simplistic assumptions regarding development.
On many indicators the state performs better than the national average. Educational attainment is higher, institutional deliveries are more common, internet usage is widespread, and health insurance coverage has expanded dramatically.
Yet the state continues to report substantial levels of child undernutrition and growing concerns regarding wasting and underweight prevalence.
This suggests that income growth alone cannot eliminate nutritional deficits.
The Haryana experience demonstrates that development requires more than prosperity. It requires equitable access to resources, improved dietary diversity, gender-sensitive policies, quality public services, and strong social protection systems.
The next section examines one of the most significant instruments designed to address these challenges—the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and its Supplementary Nutrition Programme.
IV. ICDS and the Supplementary Nutrition Programme: India's Largest Social Investment in Child Development
When the history of social policy in independent India is written, the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), launched in 1975, will undoubtedly occupy a central place. Conceived during a period when child malnutrition, infant mortality, and maternal deprivation were recognised as major barriers to development, ICDS represented a departure from narrowly conceived welfare programmes. It acknowledged that child development is not merely a matter of food distribution but an integrated process involving nutrition, healthcare, early childhood education, and maternal well-being.
The programme emerged from a growing scientific understanding that the foundations of human development are laid during the earliest years of life. By targeting pregnant women, lactating mothers, adolescent girls, and children below six years of age, ICDS attempted to address the intergenerational transmission of poverty and malnutrition.
At the heart of ICDS lies the Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP). The rationale behind SNP is deceptively simple yet profoundly important. If children and women from economically vulnerable households are unable to obtain adequate nutrition through market mechanisms, the state must intervene to supplement dietary deficiencies.
The programme therefore provides additional calories and proteins to vulnerable groups through Anganwadi Centres.
For children aged six months to six years, pregnant women, and lactating mothers, SNP functions as a nutritional safety net. Over time, this intervention has evolved from a welfare measure into a strategic investment in human capital formation.
The importance of SNP becomes evident when viewed against India's nutritional history. At the time of ICDS expansion, widespread child malnutrition was deeply entrenched. Large sections of the population suffered from chronic calorie deficiency, protein-energy malnutrition, anaemia, and micronutrient deficiencies.
Several generations of children entered adulthood carrying the physical and cognitive scars of nutritional deprivation.
The expansion of ICDS represented an attempt to break this cycle.
Nutrition Beyond Calories
One of the most important contributions of ICDS has been the transformation of public understanding regarding nutrition.
Historically, hunger was perceived primarily as a shortage of calories.
Modern nutritional science, however, demonstrates that health depends upon a complex interaction of energy, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, and dietary diversity.
A child may consume sufficient calories and yet remain malnourished if the diet lacks proteins, iron, zinc, calcium, vitamin A, or folic acid.
Such deficiencies are often invisible.
The child survives but does not thrive.
Growth falters. Cognitive development slows. Immunity weakens. Learning outcomes deteriorate.
This phenomenon is particularly relevant in India where cereal consumption remains relatively high while dietary diversity remains uneven.
The SNP sought to address this challenge by providing supplementary food enriched with proteins and micronutrients.
Although implementation quality has varied across states, the programme has undoubtedly contributed to improved nutritional outcomes.
"The objective of nutrition policy is not merely to prevent death; it is to enable human potential."
V. Did SNP Reduce Malnutrition? Evidence from NFHS
A critical examination of NFHS data suggests that India has made measurable progress against chronic malnutrition over the past decade.
Table 1: Child Nutrition Indicators in India
Indicator | NFHS-4 | NFHS-5 | NFHS-6 |
Stunting (%) | 38.4 | 35.5 | 29.3 |
Wasting (%) | 21.0 | 19.3 | 19.0 |
Underweight (%) | 35.8 | 32.1 | 31.8 |
Interpreting the Table
The decline in stunting from approximately 38 percent to 29 percent represents one of the most significant achievements in public health during the past decade.
Stunting reflects long-term nutritional deprivation.
Unlike wasting, which captures short-term nutritional shocks, stunting indicates sustained deficits experienced during critical periods of growth.
The reduction suggests that millions of children have benefited from improved access to food, healthcare, immunisation, sanitation, and nutrition services.
ICDS and SNP have played an important role in this transformation.
However, the persistence of nearly one-third of children being stunted indicates that nutritional deprivation remains deeply embedded in social structures.
Economic growth alone has not solved the problem.
The Limits of Nutritional Interventions
While SNP has contributed to improvements, it cannot independently eliminate malnutrition.
Nutrition is influenced by multiple determinants.
These include:
Maternal education
Household income
Dietary diversity
Safe drinking water
Sanitation
Disease burden
Women's empowerment
Healthcare access
The effectiveness of supplementary feeding therefore depends upon broader socio-economic conditions.
Where these conditions remain unfavourable, nutritional interventions may produce only partial improvements.
This explains why some districts continue to experience high levels of malnutrition despite decades of ICDS implementation.
VI. Haryana: The Development Paradox
Haryana presents a fascinating developmental contradiction.
The state ranks among India's most prosperous regions. Agricultural productivity remains high. Urbanisation has accelerated. Educational attainment has improved significantly. Infrastructure development has transformed large parts of the state.
Yet nutritional indicators continue to reveal serious concerns.
Table 2: Haryana Child Nutrition Indicators
Indicator | NFHS-4 | NFHS-5 | NFHS-6 |
Stunting (%) | 34.0 | 27.5 | 25.9 |
Wasting (%) | 21.2 | 11.5 | 16.6 |
Underweight (%) | 29.4 | 21.5 | 28.9 |
Understanding the Findings
The reduction in stunting is encouraging.
Haryana has substantially outperformed the national average.
The decline suggests improvements in maternal health services, institutional deliveries, immunisation coverage, and nutritional interventions.
Yet the rise in wasting and underweight prevalence between NFHS-5 and NFHS-6 is deeply concerning.
These indicators point toward short-term nutritional stress.
Such findings challenge simplistic assumptions that economic prosperity automatically ensures nutritional security.
A state may become richer while segments of its population continue to experience deprivation.
The benefits of growth are not distributed equally.
"Prosperity at the state level does not guarantee nutrition at the household level."
VII. Poverty, Class and Nutritional Inequality
The NFHS findings cannot be understood without examining class differences.
Nutrition varies significantly across socio-economic groups.
For analytical purposes, households may be broadly categorised into three groups:
Below Poverty Line (BPL)
Above Poverty Line (APL)
Upper and affluent strata
Each experiences nutrition differently.
BPL Households: Nutrition as Survival
For poor households, food consumption is primarily driven by affordability.
The objective is survival rather than dietary optimisation.
Meals are often cereal dominated and lack diversity.
Protein-rich foods such as milk, eggs, pulses, fruits, and nuts are consumed irregularly.
Economic shocks can immediately affect food consumption.
A medical emergency, job loss, crop failure, or debt repayment may reduce household food expenditure.
Children are the first victims of such shocks.
Nutritional deficiencies accumulate gradually and manifest through stunting, wasting, and underweight prevalence.
For BPL households, ICDS and SNP often represent the only reliable source of supplementary nutrition available to young children.
In many villages, Anganwadi centres provide not merely nutrition but a sense of nutritional security.
The significance of the programme therefore extends beyond caloric supplementation.
It functions as a social protection mechanism.
APL Households: Nutrition under Constraint
Households above the poverty line are not necessarily nutritionally secure.
Many remain vulnerable to hidden hunger.
Dietary diversity may improve, but nutritional awareness often remains limited.
Consumption patterns frequently prioritise satiety over nutritional quality.
Processed foods are increasingly replacing traditional diets.
Children may consume sufficient calories yet suffer from micronutrient deficiencies.
Such households occupy an intermediate position where economic constraints continue to shape dietary choices.
Affluent Households: The Double Burden
Among affluent households, the nutritional challenge changes.
Undernutrition becomes less common.
Overnutrition becomes more prevalent.
Rising obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular diseases increasingly affect higher-income groups.
This phenomenon illustrates the nutrition transition occurring across India.
The challenge is no longer merely insufficient food but unhealthy food.
Thus, nutritional policy must address both deprivation and excess.
VIII. Why the Girl Child Remains Central to the Nutrition Question
Perhaps no aspect of the NFHS is more revealing than the condition of girls and women.
The nutritional status of girls determines the future nutritional status of society.
A malnourished girl is more likely to become a malnourished adolescent.
A malnourished adolescent is more likely to become an anaemic mother.
An anaemic mother is more likely to give birth to a low-birth-weight child.
The cycle then repeats itself.
This intergenerational transmission of disadvantage explains why the girl child occupies a central position within nutrition policy.
Growing Up Female in India
The experiences of girls vary dramatically across socio-economic classes.
In affluent households, girls increasingly access education, healthcare, and nutrition.
In poor households, however, gender disparities continue to influence resource allocation.
Although overt discrimination has declined, subtle forms persist.
Boys are often prioritised for education.
Girls undertake greater domestic responsibilities.
Their nutritional needs receive less attention.
Healthcare seeking behaviour may also differ.
These inequalities accumulate throughout childhood.
By adolescence, the consequences become visible in the form of anaemia and nutritional deficits.
NFHS data consistently demonstrates that adolescent girls remain one of the most nutritionally vulnerable groups in India.
IX. Education as a Nutritional Intervention
The relationship between education and health is among the most powerful findings of modern social science.
Education affects nutrition through several pathways.
Educated women:
Marry later.
Have fewer children.
Utilise healthcare services more frequently.
Understand nutritional requirements better.
Ensure immunisation of children.
Demand institutional deliveries.
NFHS-6 demonstrates remarkable improvements in female education.
Haryana now exceeds the national average in female schooling and internet access.
These gains are likely to generate long-term improvements in child nutrition.
Education therefore functions as an indirect nutritional intervention.
Every additional year of schooling increases the probability that a woman will make informed health decisions for herself and her children.
In this sense, investments in education and nutrition reinforce one another.
Human development is cumulative.
Health improves education.
Education improves health.
Both contribute to economic productivity.
The next section will examine how child marriage, domestic violence, women's employment, and reproductive autonomy shape health outcomes, and why Haryana's future nutritional progress depends increasingly on gender equality rather than food distribution alone.
X. Child Marriage, Adolescent Motherhood and the Reproduction of Poverty
One of the most important findings emerging from successive NFHS rounds is the gradual decline in child marriage. Yet the practice continues to affect millions of girls and remains one of the most powerful mechanisms through which poverty reproduces itself across generations.
The NFHS-6 data indicates that the proportion of women aged 20–24 years married before the legal age of 18 has declined nationally from 23.3 percent in NFHS-5 to 20.1 percent in NFHS-6. Haryana performs better than the national average, recording a decline from 12.5 percent to 11.9 percent.
At first glance, these improvements appear encouraging. However, a deeper examination reveals that child marriage remains concentrated among poorer, less educated, and socially marginalised populations.
This concentration is not accidental.
Families experiencing economic insecurity frequently perceive daughters through the lens of social and financial responsibility. Marriage is often regarded as a mechanism for reducing household expenditure and transferring responsibility to another family.
Such perceptions are reinforced by patriarchal norms that value girls primarily through their future marital roles.
The consequences for health are profound.
Girls married before adulthood are more likely to discontinue education, experience early pregnancy, suffer anaemia, and face complications during childbirth.
The biological explanation is straightforward.
The adolescent body is still undergoing physical growth. Pregnancy during this period creates competition for nutrients between the mother and the developing fetus.
As a result, adolescent pregnancies are associated with:
Low birth weight.
Premature births.
Maternal anaemia.
Neonatal mortality.
Growth retardation.
The social consequences are equally severe.
Early marriage reduces educational attainment, restricts employment opportunities, weakens bargaining power within households, and increases vulnerability to domestic violence.
Thus, child marriage should not be understood merely as a legal issue.
It is fundamentally a nutrition issue, a health issue, a gender issue, and a development issue.
"Every child marriage is not merely the loss of a childhood; it is the creation of a future health inequality."
XI. Domestic Violence and Women's Health: The Hidden Public Health Crisis
The relationship between violence and health is often underestimated.
Public discourse frequently treats domestic violence as a criminal justice issue, while overlooking its profound implications for physical and mental health.
NFHS-6 reveals that approximately 22.3 percent of ever-married women in India have experienced spousal violence. Haryana reports a lower prevalence of 13.6 percent, reflecting improvement from 17.9 percent in NFHS-5.
Although Haryana performs better than the national average, the findings remain deeply troubling.
One in seven women experiencing violence represents not an isolated social problem but a systemic public health challenge.
Violence affects nutrition through multiple pathways.
Women subjected to violence frequently experience:
Chronic stress.
Depression.
Anxiety.
Reduced autonomy over food consumption.
Restricted healthcare access.
Reproductive coercion.
Scientific research increasingly demonstrates that prolonged exposure to violence affects hormonal regulation, immune function, and metabolic health.
Women living in abusive environments often delay healthcare seeking and experience poorer nutritional outcomes.
Children growing up in such households are also affected.
Maternal stress influences infant feeding practices, child care, and emotional development.
The consequences therefore extend across generations.
Domestic violence, nutrition, and child development are deeply interconnected.
XII. Women's Employment and Economic Autonomy
The NFHS data strongly supports one of the central propositions of development economics: women who control resources improve family welfare.
Economic autonomy alters household decision-making structures.
Women with independent incomes are more likely to:
Invest in children's education.
Improve dietary diversity.
Access healthcare.
Seek institutional deliveries.
Participate in household decisions.
The Haryana experience illustrates both progress and contradiction.
NFHS-6 reports that approximately 25.1 percent of women worked for cash during the previous year compared to 18.8 percent during NFHS-5.
While this improvement is noteworthy, the overall participation rate remains relatively low.
This reveals an important paradox.
Haryana is among India's most prosperous states, yet female labour force participation remains constrained by social norms, unpaid care work, and gendered expectations.
Economic growth without gender inclusion limits developmental outcomes.
A household in which women possess education but lack economic autonomy may not experience the full benefits associated with women's empowerment.
The evidence increasingly suggests that employment functions as a health intervention.
Income enhances access to food.
Economic independence increases decision-making power.
Together, these factors improve nutritional outcomes.
XIII. Haryana versus India: A Comparative Development Profile
The comparative performance of Haryana and India reveals both achievements and emerging challenges.
Table 3: Selected NFHS-6 Indicators
Indicator | India (%) | Haryana (%) |
Women with 10+ years schooling | 46.4 | 55.2 |
Institutional births | 90.6 | 96.3 |
Four or more ANC visits | 65.2 | 79.0 |
Health insurance coverage | 60.2 | 68.3 |
Female internet use | 64.3 | 74.0 |
Children attending pre-school | 47.0 | 48.7 |
Women using hygienic menstrual products | 79.2 | 94.3 |
Stunting | 29.3 | 25.9 |
Underweight | 31.8 | 28.9 |
Reading the Table
The data clearly demonstrates that Haryana performs better than the national average across most indicators.
Educational attainment is higher.
Maternal healthcare utilisation is stronger.
Women's digital inclusion exceeds national levels.
Health insurance coverage is substantially greater.
Yet the nutritional picture remains mixed.
The persistence of high underweight prevalence despite superior socio-economic indicators suggests that development is not translating uniformly into nutritional gains.
This disconnect deserves careful attention.
XIV. The Breastfeeding Crisis in Haryana
Among the most surprising findings of NFHS-6 is the sharp decline in exclusive breastfeeding.
Table 4: Exclusive Breastfeeding
Survey | Haryana (%) |
NFHS-5 | 69.5 |
NFHS-6 | 41.2 |
The decline represents one of the most significant reversals observed in the survey.
Several factors may explain this trend.
Urbanisation has altered family structures.
Joint families are increasingly giving way to nuclear households.
Commercial infant food marketing has expanded.
Working mothers often face inadequate maternity support.
Traditional breastfeeding practices may be weakening under changing social conditions.
The implications are serious.
Exclusive breastfeeding during the first six months of life protects against infections, improves immunity, supports brain development, and reduces mortality.
The decline therefore has important public health implications.
Policy responses must move beyond awareness campaigns and address structural barriers facing mothers.
"No nutritional intervention can fully compensate for the loss of optimal breastfeeding during the first six months of life."
XV. Scientific Interpretation of Stunting, Wasting and Underweight
Public discussions frequently use these terms interchangeably.
Scientifically, however, they represent distinct conditions.
Stunting
Stunting reflects chronic nutritional deprivation.
A stunted child has experienced long-term deficits in nutrition and repeated infections.
The consequences include:
Reduced cognitive development.
Lower educational achievement.
Decreased adult productivity.
Increased disease susceptibility.
The reduction in Haryana's stunting prevalence from 34 percent in NFHS-4 to 25.9 percent in NFHS-6 indicates meaningful progress.
This improvement likely reflects decades of investment in ICDS, maternal health, immunisation, sanitation, and education.
Wasting
Wasting measures acute malnutrition.
It reflects recent weight loss or failure to gain weight.
Unlike stunting, wasting can change rapidly in response to illness, food insecurity, or inadequate feeding.
The increase in Haryana's wasting rate from 11.5 percent to 16.6 percent warrants serious concern.
It suggests growing vulnerabilities among sections of the child population despite broader economic growth.
Underweight
Underweight combines elements of both chronic and acute malnutrition.
A child may become underweight because of long-term deprivation, recent illness, or both.
The increase in Haryana's underweight prevalence from 21.5 percent to 28.9 percent is among the most alarming findings of NFHS-6.
The trend requires urgent investigation at district and block levels.
XVI. Why Economic Growth Alone Cannot Eliminate Malnutrition
The Haryana experience challenges conventional development thinking.
For decades, policymakers assumed that rising incomes would automatically improve nutrition.
The evidence suggests otherwise.
Economic growth is necessary but insufficient.
Nutrition depends upon:
Distribution of income.
Dietary diversity.
Maternal education.
Women's autonomy.
Public health infrastructure.
Sanitation.
Social protection.
A household may possess adequate income yet continue to experience poor nutrition because of inadequate dietary practices.
Conversely, targeted public interventions may improve nutritional outcomes even among low-income populations.
The lesson is clear.
Nutrition policy must address structural determinants rather than relying exclusively on market-driven solutions.
XVII. NFHS-6 as a Roadmap for Future Policy
The significance of NFHS-6 extends beyond measurement.
The survey provides a roadmap for future interventions.
Several priorities emerge.
First, child nutrition must remain central to development planning.
Second, adolescent girls require greater attention.
Third, breastfeeding promotion must be strengthened.
Fourth, women's economic participation should be viewed as a health intervention.
Fifth, district-level disparities require targeted responses.
Finally, ICDS and Poshan 2.0 must evolve beyond food distribution toward integrated child development strategies.
The survey highlights both achievements and unfinished tasks.
It demonstrates that progress is possible but not inevitable.
Development requires continuous investment in people.
XVIII. Reimagining ICDS in the Era of NFHS-6: From Feeding Programme to Human Development Mission
Nearly five decades after its launch, the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) remains one of the world's largest and most ambitious early childhood development programmes. Yet NFHS-6 suggests that the future of ICDS must be fundamentally different from its past.
Historically, ICDS was viewed primarily as a feeding programme.
The Anganwadi Centre was often perceived as a site where supplementary nutrition was distributed and preschool education was provided. Such a perception, while not entirely incorrect, significantly underestimates the transformative potential of the programme.
The contemporary developmental challenge facing India is no longer merely the prevention of starvation. It is the creation of healthy, educated, productive, and empowered citizens.
The role of ICDS must therefore expand from nutritional supplementation to comprehensive human development.
The scientific evidence accumulated over the past three decades strongly supports this shift.
Nutrition outcomes are shaped not only by food intake but also by maternal education, sanitation, healthcare access, immunisation, mental health, social support systems, and gender relations.
The child who receives supplementary nutrition but lives in an environment characterised by poor sanitation, maternal anaemia, domestic violence, and educational deprivation remains vulnerable.
Consequently, the future ICDS model must integrate nutrition with broader developmental interventions.
The emergence of Poshan 2.0 represents an important step in this direction. However, the success of such initiatives will depend upon their ability to move beyond administrative targets and address structural inequalities.
XIX. The Anganwadi Centre as an Institution of Social Transformation
Few public institutions in rural India possess the social reach of the Anganwadi Centre.
Schools primarily serve children.
Health facilities primarily serve patients.
Panchayats primarily engage with governance.
The Anganwadi Centre, however, intersects with all stages of the human life cycle.
It engages with pregnant women, lactating mothers, infants, preschool children, adolescent girls, and families.
This unique position gives the institution transformative potential.
In many villages, the Anganwadi Worker represents the first point of contact between the state and vulnerable households.
Her responsibilities extend far beyond nutrition distribution.
She is expected to:
Monitor growth.
Provide nutrition counselling.
Facilitate immunisation.
Support maternal health.
Promote breastfeeding.
Deliver early childhood education.
Mobilise community participation.
The NFHS findings indicate that future improvements in nutrition will depend increasingly on behavioural change rather than food provision alone.
This reality enhances the importance of Anganwadi Centres.
The challenge now is not simply ensuring that children receive supplementary nutrition.
The challenge is ensuring that families understand nutrition.
Knowledge must accompany food.
Awareness must accompany services.
Community participation must accompany policy.
"The future of nutrition policy lies not only in feeding children but in creating informed families."
XX. Haryana's Nutritional Challenge: Prosperity Amid Persistent Inequality
The Haryana experience illustrates one of the central contradictions of contemporary development.
Economic prosperity has expanded dramatically.
Educational attainment has improved.
Healthcare utilisation has increased.
Women's empowerment indicators have strengthened.
Yet nutritional outcomes continue to reveal significant vulnerabilities.
The persistence of wasting and underweight prevalence demonstrates that development remains uneven.
Several structural explanations deserve consideration.
Unequal Distribution of Prosperity
Economic growth does not automatically benefit all households equally.
Haryana's prosperity is concentrated within specific regions and socio-economic groups.
Districts located within the National Capital Region have benefited disproportionately from industrialisation, urbanisation, and infrastructure development.
Other regions continue to face developmental challenges.
Such disparities create nutritional inequalities that are not immediately visible through aggregate statistics.
State averages often conceal local deprivation.
District-level analysis therefore becomes essential.
Changing Food Habits
Economic growth has altered dietary patterns.
Traditional diets rich in coarse grains, pulses, and locally available foods are increasingly being replaced by processed and commercially marketed products.
The result is a paradoxical coexistence of undernutrition and overnutrition.
Some children continue to experience nutritional deprivation while others face increasing risks of obesity and metabolic disorders.
This phenomenon is commonly described as the double burden of malnutrition.
NFHS-6 demonstrates that India and Haryana are increasingly confronting this challenge.
Declining Breastfeeding and Emerging Vulnerabilities
The decline in exclusive breastfeeding represents an important warning signal.
Scientific evidence consistently demonstrates that breastfeeding constitutes one of the most cost-effective public health interventions available.
Its decline may reflect broader social transformations including urbanisation, changing employment patterns, commercial marketing practices, and weakening traditional support systems.
Unless addressed, these trends may undermine future nutritional progress.
XXI. Nutrition and Democracy: Why Basic Needs Matter
One of the most significant lessons emerging from NFHS-6 is that nutrition cannot be separated from questions of social justice.
Development is often discussed in terms of economic growth rates, investment flows, and industrial production.
Yet such measures reveal little about the daily experiences of ordinary citizens.
For the common person, development is experienced through access to food, healthcare, education, housing, sanitation, and employment.
The absence of these basic needs creates conditions under which malnutrition flourishes.
A democratic society must therefore be judged not only by the wealth it creates but by the opportunities it distributes.
The persistence of child malnutrition in a rapidly growing economy raises important ethical questions.
Why should children continue to experience nutritional deprivation in regions characterised by rising prosperity?
Why should educational opportunities remain unevenly distributed?
Why should access to quality healthcare depend upon income?
These questions transcend public policy.
They concern the moral foundations of development itself.
"The true test of development is not the wealth of the richest household but the health of the poorest child."
XXII. Policy Recommendations
The NFHS-6 findings suggest several priorities for Haryana and India.
Strengthening Early Childhood Nutrition
Nutritional interventions must focus on the first thousand days of life.
This period determines future physical and cognitive development.
Enhanced monitoring of pregnant women, improved maternal nutrition, and strengthened breastfeeding support should receive priority.
Improving Dietary Diversity
The focus of nutritional programmes should extend beyond calories.
Protein-rich foods, fruits, vegetables, eggs, milk products, and micronutrient supplementation require greater attention.
Dietary diversity should become a measurable programme objective.
Adolescent Girls as a Priority Group
The nutritional status of adolescent girls influences future maternal and child health outcomes.
School-based nutrition interventions, iron supplementation, menstrual hygiene programmes, and life-skills education should be expanded.
Women's Economic Empowerment
Employment opportunities for women should be viewed as investments in public health.
Economic autonomy enhances household nutrition, healthcare utilisation, and educational attainment.
Policies promoting female workforce participation are likely to generate long-term developmental benefits.
Strengthening Anganwadi Infrastructure
Modernisation of Anganwadi Centres remains essential.
Adequate infrastructure, digital monitoring systems, growth measurement tools, and capacity-building initiatives should be prioritised.
District-Specific Planning
State-level averages often conceal local disparities.
Nutritional interventions should be tailored to district-specific needs.
Data-driven planning must become the foundation of future policy.
XXIII. Conclusion: Beyond Survival Towards Human Flourishing
The trajectory from NFHS-4 to NFHS-6 reveals a nation undergoing profound transformation.
India has made substantial progress in maternal health, institutional deliveries, immunisation, women's education, financial inclusion, and access to healthcare.
Haryana has generally outperformed national averages across many of these indicators.
These achievements deserve recognition.
Yet the surveys also expose enduring inequalities.
The persistence of stunting, the rise in wasting and underweight prevalence in Haryana, the decline in exclusive breastfeeding, and the continuing burden of poverty-related deprivation demonstrate that development remains incomplete.
The findings challenge simplistic narratives that equate economic growth with human development.
Growth matters.
But growth alone is insufficient.
Nutrition is shaped by a complex interaction of food security, education, gender equality, healthcare access, sanitation, employment, and social protection.
The experience of Haryana illustrates this reality vividly.
A prosperous economy may still contain malnourished children.
An educated society may still tolerate gender inequality.
A growing state may still struggle with nutritional deprivation among vulnerable populations.
The central lesson of NFHS-6 is therefore clear.
Human development cannot be reduced to income.
It must be understood as the expansion of capabilities.
A child who is healthy, educated, nourished, and secure possesses opportunities that extend far beyond survival.
Such a child is capable of contributing productively to society, participating meaningfully in democracy, and realising her full potential.
The future of India depends upon creating these opportunities for every child, regardless of gender, caste, class, or geography.
The battle against malnutrition is therefore not merely a battle against hunger.
It is a struggle for equality.
It is a struggle for dignity.
It is a struggle for justice.
And ultimately, it is a struggle for the future itself.
"Prosperity at the state level does not guarantee nutrition at the household level."
"The true test of development is not the wealth of the richest household but the health of the poorest child."
References
1. Government of India. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4), 2015–16.
2. Government of India. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5), 2019–21.
3. Government of India. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-6), 2023–24.
4. Ministry of Women and Child Development. Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) Guidelines.
5. Poshan Abhiyaan Operational Guidelines.
6. World Health Organization. Child Growth Standards.
7. UNICEF. State of the World's Children Reports.
8. United Nations Development Programme. Human Development Reports.
9. Dreze, Jean and Sen, Amartya. Hunger and Public Action.
10. Sen, Amartya. Development as Freedom.
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