How schools can tackle adolescent malnutrition
How Schools Can Tackle Adolescent Malnutrition
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Double burden of malnutrition — India simultaneously faces undernutrition (stunting, wasting, anaemia) and rapidly rising obesity/metabolic disease among adolescents; schools are the single largest point of intervention. [S1]
- NFHS-6 (2023-24) — obesity among women (15-49 yrs) jumped from 24% → 30.7%; among men from 22.9% → 27.3%; high blood sugar among men (15+) rose from 15.6% → 20.9%. [S5]
- Adolescence (10-19 yrs) is the second critical window after the first 1,000 days; habits formed here lock in adult metabolic trajectories. [S1][S2]
- Schools enrol ~250 million children (Govt/aided sector alone under PM POSHAN) — making them the highest-reach public-health platform available to the Indian state. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- NFHS-6 (2023-24) findings released in 2025-26 showed alarming rises in obesity, blood sugar and the "thin-fat phenotype" — children appearing lean yet carrying dangerous metabolic risk — among adolescents, including in rural populations; this revived policy debate on school-based nutrition interventions. [S5]
- Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey (CNNS) data flagged that metabolic risk now begins in school-going years, not adulthood. [S5]
- Article by senior ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition scientists (SubbaRao M. Gavaravarapu & Bharati Kulkarni) published 29 June 2026 laid out a school-centric roadmap. [S5]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1995 | Mid-Day Meal Scheme launched nationally (school feeding as nutrition policy). |
| 2013 | National Food Security Act — MDM gets statutory backing; entitlements codified. |
| 2018 | POSHAN Abhiyaan (National Nutrition Mission) launched 8 March — lifecycle approach including adolescent girls. [S3][S4] |
| 2021-22 | Poshan 2.0 announced in Union Budget — MDM + ICDS + Adolescent Scheme merged into Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0. [S2][S3] |
| 2025 | PM POSHAN (successor to MDM) extended; Anemia Mukt Bharat integrated with POSHAN Abhiyaan and School Health Programme. [S4] |
| 2023-24 | NFHS-6 data released; Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey highlights metabolic risk onset in adolescence. [S5] |
Predecessors: Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS, 1975); National Anaemia Control Programme; Scheme for Adolescent Girls (SAG/Kishori Shakti Yojana).
4. Core Static Facts
Key Definitions
- Adolescent: 10-19 years (WHO definition). [S1]
- Double burden of malnutrition: coexistence of undernutrition (stunting, wasting, anaemia) and overnutrition (obesity, metabolic syndrome) within the same population or even individual.
- Thin-fat phenotype: children with normal/low BMI but high visceral fat and metabolic risk — specific risk of Indian adolescents. [S5]
- WIFS: Weekly Iron Folic Acid Supplementation — targets adolescents 10-19 yrs to reduce anaemia prevalence and severity. [S4]
Implementing Structure
| Programme | Nodal Ministry | Target Group |
|---|---|---|
| PM POSHAN (school meals) | Min. of Education | Children in Govt/Govt-aided schools |
| Poshan 2.0 / Saksham Anganwadi | Min. of Women & Child Development (MoWCD) | Children 0-6 yrs, pregnant/lactating mothers, adolescent girls |
| WIFS | Min. of Health & Family Welfare | Adolescents 10-19 yrs |
| Anemia Mukt Bharat | MoHFW (integrated) | All age groups |
| School Health Programme | MoHFW + MoE | School-going children |
Key Numbers
- NFHS-6: Stunting (children <5 yrs) — NFHS-5 baseline: 35.5% [S1]; wasting: 19.3% [S1].
- Obesity (women 15-49): 30.7% (NFHS-6 vs 24% in NFHS-5). [S5]
- High blood sugar (men 15+): 20.9% (NFHS-6 vs 15.6% in NFHS-5). [S5]
- POSHAN Abhiyaan target: reduce stunting, undernutrition, anaemia and low birth weight by 2% per annum. [S3]
- PM POSHAN covers children in Government and Government-aided schools. [S3]
Enabling Acts / Policy
- National Food Security Act, 2013 — statutory basis for school meals.
- Right to Education Act, 2009 — foundational for school-based health services.
- POSHAN Abhiyaan — Cabinet approval; Poshan 2.0 announced in Union Budget 2021-22. [S2]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Social
- Rural adolescents now show lifestyle-disease risk patterns previously confined to urban elites — the "rural obesity transition" documented in NFHS-6. [S5]
- Girls disproportionately affected by anaemia; WIFS specifically targets both boys and girls 10-19 yrs but SAG/Poshan 2.0 adolescent stream focuses on out-of-school girls. [S4]
- Tribal children — improving trend in malnutrition per PIB data but baseline significantly worse than national average. [S1]
Economic
- Malnutrition cost India an estimated ~3% of GDP (World Bank estimates for South Asia); adolescent-onset metabolic disease compounds lifetime health expenditure and reduces labour productivity. [S6]
- School meal programmes act as an implicit income transfer for poor families, improving school attendance and reducing household food expenditure.
Scientific / Technological
- "Thin-fat phenotype" — identified via CNNS; requires body-composition screening beyond BMI, demanding skinfold calipers / bio-impedance in school health checks. [S5]
- ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition's "Let's Fix Our Food" initiative — evidence-based dietary literacy programme targeting school settings. [S5]
- Fortification — supply of fortified food in school lunches (rice, oil, milk) is a cost-effective micronutrient delivery mechanism in PM POSHAN. [S3]
Administrative
- Convergence gap: PM POSHAN (MoE) and Poshan 2.0 (MoWCD) operate in parallel with limited school-level integration; WIFS under MoHFW adds a third silo.
- Last-mile delivery bottlenecks: irregular iron tablet supply under WIFS, poor compliance among adolescent boys, limited monitoring capacity in rural schools.
- State-level variation is large; some states have introduced school canteen policies and junk-food bans near school premises (e.g., Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra). [S5]
Ethical / Governance
- School canteens and nearby vendors actively sell ultra-processed foods; no national regulatory framework currently governs food sold within 50 metres of schools (unlike some ASEAN models). [S5]
- Stigma around body weight and eating disorders among adolescent girls is an under-addressed governance gap.
- The "Let's Fix Our Food" framing by ICMR-NIN signals a shift toward demand-side empowerment, not just supply-side supplementation — raising questions of curriculum design and teacher training accountability. [S5]
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 21A (Right to Education) + Article 47 (State duty to improve nutrition) — constitutional basis for state intervention in school nutrition.
- National Food Security Act, 2013, Chapter III — mandates nutritional norms for school-age children.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12-18 Months)
- 2025 (April): PIB published "India's Fight Against Anaemia — Nourish, Prevent, Protect" document consolidating WIFS + Anemia Mukt Bharat progress data. [S4]
- 2025: Mission Poshan 2.0 strengthening report released by PIB emphasising lifecycle approach and adolescent stream integration. [S3]
- 2025-26 (NFHS-6 findings): First-ever data showing double burden in rural populations; obesity and blood sugar metrics replace undernutrition as primary concern among adults — triggering school-intervention advocacy. [S5]
- June 29, 2026: ICMR-NIN scientists publish landmark op-ed in The Hindu recommending schools adopt five-pronged approach: dietary education, canteen regulation, physical activity, body-composition screening, and mental-health linkage. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- NFHS-6 (2023-24): Obesity among women aged 15-49 rose to 30.7% (from 24% in NFHS-5). [S5]
- WIFS = Weekly Iron Folic Acid Supplementation; targets adolescents 10-19 years; implemented by Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. [S4]
- POSHAN Abhiyaan was launched on 8 March 2018 by the Ministry of Women & Child Development. [S3]
- Poshan 2.0 was announced in Union Budget 2021-22; it merged ICDS, MDM, and Adolescent Girls Scheme. [S2]
- PM POSHAN (formerly Mid-Day Meal Scheme) is under the Ministry of Education, not MoWCD. [S3]
- "Thin-fat phenotype" — children with low/normal BMI but high metabolic risk — is a specific documented risk among Indian adolescents per CNNS data. [S5]
- NFHS-5 baseline: Stunting (children <5) — 35.5%; wasting — 19.3%; underweight — 32.1%. [S1]
- High blood sugar among men aged 15+ jumped from 15.6% → 20.9% between NFHS-5 and NFHS-6. [S5]
- Anemia Mukt Bharat is integrated with POSHAN Abhiyaan and the School Health Programme under MoHFW. [S4]
- The National Food Security Act, 2013 provides statutory backing to school meal entitlements.
- ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), Hyderabad — apex body for nutrition research; authors of the "Let's Fix Our Food" initiative. [S5]
- The Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey (CNNS) — first national-level survey specifically capturing adolescent and school-age child nutrition data, including metabolic biomarkers.
- Article 47 of the Constitution — Directive Principle placing duty on the State to raise the level of nutrition and standard of living.
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Health, Education — Government policies and interventions; issues relating to development and management of Social Sector |
| GS-II | Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; functioning of social sector initiatives |
| GS-I | Salient features of Indian Society — Urbanisation, poverty, demographic dividend |
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India faces a double burden of malnutrition that is no longer an urban phenomenon. Critically examine the role schools can play in tackling adolescent malnutrition, with reference to existing government programmes." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "The 'thin-fat phenotype' presents a unique challenge to conventional nutrition interventions in India. Discuss the adequacy of current school-health policies in addressing this emerging metabolic crisis." (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Analyse the administrative and convergence challenges that limit the effectiveness of India's multi-ministry approach to adolescent nutrition. Suggest reforms." (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| PM POSHAN / Mid-Day Meal Scheme | Direct school-based nutrition delivery mechanism; implementation, funding, quality issues |
| POSHAN Abhiyaan & Poshan 2.0 | Parent policy framework for all nutrition interventions; convergence architecture |
| Anemia Mukt Bharat / WIFS | Adolescent-specific anaemia programme; links to school health |
| NFHS data series (NFHS-4, 5, 6) | Primary data source for all nutrition-related Prelims/Mains facts |
| National Food Security Act, 2013 | Legal framework underpinning entitlements; PDS, MDM, ICDS |
| India's Demographic Dividend | Adolescent nutrition directly determines productivity of the working-age bulge; GS-I link |
| Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) — Diabetes, CVD | Downstream consequence of adolescent malnutrition; National NCD Policy |
| Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009 | School infrastructure and health services mandated under RTE; GS-II overlap |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Ministry confusion — PM POSHAN vs Poshan 2.0: PM POSHAN (school meals) → Ministry of Education. Poshan 2.0 (Anganwadi/adolescent girls) → Ministry of Women & Child Development. Aspirants routinely swap these.
- WIFS age group: WIFS targets 10-19 years (not just girls; both boys and girls in school). Do not confuse with SAG (Scheme for Adolescent Girls, 14-18 yrs, only girls).
- NFHS-5 vs NFHS-6 data: NFHS-5 is 2019-21; NFHS-6 is 2023-24. Questions may cite either; ensure you know which round produced which statistic.
- "Thin-fat" ≠ stunting: Thin-fat phenotype refers to metabolic risk despite normal/low body weight — distinct from stunting (low height-for-age) and wasting (low weight-for-height). Confusing these will cost marks.
- Article 47 vs Article 21: Article 47 (DPSP) = nutrition and public health duty of the State. Article 21 = Right to Life (health has been read into it by courts). Article 21A = Right to Education. Aspirants conflate these in answer writing.
11. Sources
- [S1] Malnourishment in Tribal Children / Measures to Improve Nutritional Outcomes (PIB) — https://www.pib.gov.in/Pressreleaseshare.aspx?PRID=1776875 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Ministry of WCD: Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0 Guidelines (PIB) — https://www.pib.gov.in/Pressreleaseshare.aspx?PRID=1847548 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Mission Poshan 2.0 — Strengthening India's Nutrition Ecosystem (PIB) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2251769 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] India's Fight Against Anaemia — Nourish, Prevent, Protect (PIB/MoHFW, April 2025) — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/apr/doc2025418542201.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "How schools can tackle adolescent malnutrition" — SubbaRao M. Gavaravarapu & Bharati Kulkarni, ICMR-NIN — The Hindu, 29 June 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-29/th_international/articleGDPG67HMR-15136465.ece — (Tier 4 / Article primary source)
- [S6] Transforming India's Nationwide Nutrition Program: Poshan Abhiyaan (World Bank) — https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/india/brief/transforming-india-s-nationwide-nutrition-program — (Tier 2)