The Hindu Editorial
19 June 2026
NFHS-6 Reveals Progress Amid Nutrition Challenges
(Source – The Hindu, Editorial Page no. – 8)
Topic: GS-2: Health | Nutrition | Human Development , GS-3: Social Sector Development
Context
- NFHS-6 presents a mixed picture of India’s health and nutrition outcomes.
- Stunting has declined, institutional deliveries and immunisation have improved.
- However, child nutrition, breastfeeding practices and dietary diversity remain major concerns.

Key Findings of NFHS-6
Positive Trends
- Stunting declined from 35.5% to 29.3%.
- Institutional deliveries reached 90%.
- Skilled birth attendance increased to 91%.
- Maternal health check-ups improved significantly.
- Full immunisation coverage reached 87% among children (12–23 months).
Persistent Concerns
- Wasting levels remain largely unchanged.
- Only about 50% newborns are breastfed within the first hour.
- Around 60% children (6–8 months) receive complementary feeding.
- Only 15% children (6–23 months) receive an adequate diet.
Why Malnutrition Persists?
Poor Infant Feeding Practices
- Delayed breastfeeding initiation.
- Inadequate complementary feeding.
- Poor dietary diversity.
- Lack of awareness among caregivers.
Maternal Poverty & Care Burden
- Women balance unpaid domestic and agricultural work.
- Limited access to childcare facilities.
- Reduced time for breastfeeding and child care.
Processed Food Trap
- Growing dependence on packaged foods.
- Lower consumption of pulses, fruits, vegetables and animal protein.
- Nutritional diversity often replaced by calorie-rich processed foods.
Critical Window: First 1,000 Days
- Period from pregnancy to a child’s second birthday.
- Most brain development occurs during this phase.
- Nutritional deficiencies during this period can cause lifelong impacts.
- Early detection of growth faltering is essential.
Role of Frontline Workers
ASHA, AWW & ANM Network
- Conduct growth monitoring.
- Support immunisation and maternal care.
- Provide nutrition counselling.
Needed Reforms
- Better training in nutrition counselling.
- Real-time analysis of nutrition data.
- District-level nutrition experts and data analysts.
- Use of digital tools for monitoring and guidance.
UPSC Value Addition
Major Nutrition Initiatives
- POSHAN Abhiyaan
- Saksham Anganwadi Mission
- Mission Poshan 2.0
- Anaemia Mukt Bharat
- PM-POSHAN Scheme
- National Food Security Act (NFSA)
Causes of Child Malnutrition
- Poverty
- Poor feeding practices
- Maternal undernutrition
- Lack of sanitation
- Unsafe drinking water
- Low dietary diversity
Challenges
- Regional disparities in nutrition outcomes.
- Weak convergence between health, nutrition and sanitation sectors.
- Inadequate childcare support for working mothers.
- Rising consumption of processed foods.
- Delayed utilisation of survey data for policymaking.
Way Forward
- Promote exclusive breastfeeding and timely complementary feeding.
- Strengthen Anganwadi infrastructure and nutrition counselling.
- Expand community-based crèche facilities.
- Improve dietary diversity through locally available nutritious foods.
- Use NFHS data for district-level action plans.
- Encourage male participation in childcare and nutrition.
Conclusion
- NFHS-6 shows that India has made significant gains in healthcare access and child survival, but nutrition remains a major developmental challenge. Sustainable improvement requires a shift from merely tracking data to translating evidence into timely action at the household, community and policy levels.