Improving Nutrition and Early Childhood Development in India
India's recent observance of POSHAN Pakhwada highlighted the importance of enhancing nutrition for women and children, emphasizing early brain development. Global evidence indicates that investments in early-childhood development yield substantial economic returns, such as higher earnings, improved learning outcomes, and lower social costs.
Importance of Early Childhood Development
Advances in neuroscience suggest early childhood as a critical period where nutrition, health, and responsive caregiving shape brain development. India's commitment to this is evident through policies like the National Food Security Act, POSHAN Abhiyaan, ICDS, maternity benefits, and school meals.
Challenges and Gaps
- National surveys report high levels of stunting, wasting, and anaemia, alongside learning gaps.
- The quality of care critically influences outcomes, requiring convergence across health, nutrition, childcare, and early learning sectors.
- Anganwadi centres focus on nutrition more than holistic early learning and childcare, particularly for children under three.
- Challenges are pronounced for families in informal sectors like agriculture and construction, impacting children's development and women's work participation.
Innovative Initiatives
- Karnataka’s Koosina Mane: Community-based childcare supported by converged funding and panchayat leadership.
- Mobile Creches: Providing childcare near worksites in urban settings.
- Centre’s Palna Initiative: Strengthening anganwadi-cum-crèches for working parents.
Administrative Priorities for Strengthening Early Brain Development
- Integration of Care: Define care as a function of frontline platforms like anganwadi centres, integrating counseling on responsive caregiving and maternal well-being.
- Link Childcare with Livelihoods: Encourage local governments to use funds for community-based childcare, particularly in high-migration and informal-work settings.
- Strengthen Programme Reviews: Track child development outcomes alongside service delivery, using existing data to support local planning and accountability.
Enhancing early childhood development is crucial for India's human capital investment and the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047. Ensuring comprehensive growth involves helping children thrive, not just survive.
Contributors: Swaminathan, chairperson, M S Swaminathan Research Foundation; Sharma, principal scientist (grade II), Health and Nutrition Policy, MSSRF.