POSHAN ABHIYAAN

Poshan Abhiyaan aims to improve nutritional outcomes through technology, cross-sectoral convergence, and community involvement.

Poshan Abhiyaan

  • Launched: 8th March 2018 in Jhunjhunu, Rajasthan.
  • Ministry: Ministry of Women and Child Development (MWCD).
  • Target Groups: Adolescent girls, pregnant women, lactating mothers, and children (0-6 years).
  • Approach: Targeted and convergent nutrition strategy.

Objectives:

  • Reduce malnutrition indicators annually:
    • Stunting: 2% reduction per year.
    • Undernutrition: 2% reduction per year.
    • Anaemia (Women & Children): 3% reduction per year.
    • Low Birth Weight: 2% reduction per year.

Strategic Pillars of Poshan Abhiyaan

1. Quality Services

  • Strengthens health services via ICDS, NHM, and PMMVY.
  • Focuses on child’s first 1,000 days for maximum impact.

2. Cross-Sectoral Convergence

  • Integrates ministries like Water & Sanitation, Health, Education, and Rural Development for a holistic approach.
  • National Council on India’s Nutrition Challenges (NITI Aayog):
    • Guides policy and monitors quarterly progress.

3. Technology-Based Monitoring

  • Poshan Tracker: Real-time monitoring of beneficiaries.
  • ICDS-Common Application Software: Strengthens Anganwadi service delivery.

4. Jan Andolan (People’s Movement)

  • Community-led initiatives to raise awareness and bring behavioral change.

Nutritional Improvement (NFHS-5 vs. NFHS-4)

Indicator NFHS-4 (2015-16) NFHS-5 (2019-21) Improvement
Wasting (Low weight-for-height 21% 19.3% ↓ 1.7%
Undernutrition (Low weight-for-age) 35.7% 32.1% ↓ 3.6%
Stunting (Low height-for-age) 38.4% 35.5% ↓ 2.9%

Mission Saksham Anganwadi & Poshan 2.0

  • Also known as Mission Poshan 2.0.
  • Aims to improve health, wellness, immunity, and Anganwadi infrastructure.
  • Key Upgrades:
    • Dedicated Anganwadi buildings.
    • Functional toilets & drinking water access.

Poshan Abhiyaan is India’s largest nutrition program, addressing malnutrition through multi-sectoral collaboration and technology-driven monitoring. Poshan 2.0 and Jan Andolan initiatives aim for long-term sustainable improvements in child and maternal health.

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