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Evidence for infant and young child survival

Evidence for infant and young child survival. Dr Arun Gupta MD FIAP. Overview. State of Child Nutrition and Survival India and AP. Evidence for infant and young child survival State of breastfeeding/IYCF practices in India and AP What can be done to enhance breastfeeding rates?

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Evidence for infant and young child survival

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  1. Evidence for infant and young child survival Dr Arun Gupta MD FIAP

  2. Overview • State of Child Nutrition and Survival India and AP. • Evidence for infant and young child survival • State of breastfeeding/IYCF practices in India and AP • What can be done to enhance breastfeeding rates? • How can we do it?

  3. First year is critical! Malnutrition strikes the most in infancy beginning in 3-4th month , 29-30 % at 6 months, goes up and peaks about 46% by 18 months, flat curve after that (NFHS 3). Brain development 10 lakh children die during first month, 14 lakhs by 1 year, and 20 lakhs by 5 yrs. 2/3rd are related to poor feeding. Underweight (-2sd) NFHS-3 Over 60 million 1 2 3 4 5 Years of life

  4. The AP Report Card on Infant health

  5. Estimated Number of Babies Who Die Every Year India • 14 Lakhs Under 1 yr. • 20 Lakhs Under five yrs. Andhra Pradesh. • 1 lakh under one year

  6. Numbers….in AP • Population : 8.2 Crore • Number of children born : 18.85 Lakhs Number of underweight under 3: 22.7 Lakhs

  7. IMR

  8. Three Major Killers MOSTLY PREVENTABLE Neonatal disorders Diarrhoea Pneumonia Breastfeeding is the No. 1 preventive intervention compared to any other intervention Lancet Series on child survival, and now on newborn survival : 2003 and 2004 Source: Robert et al. LANCET 2003;361:2226-34

  9. U-5 child deaths (%) saved by universlising key interventions in India Lancet Child Survival Series,2003

  10. Deaths attributed to sub-optimal breastfeeding among children

  11. Relative risk associated with child feeding practices compared with Partial breastfeeding (LSMCU 2008) EBF

  12. Infection specific : Neonatal Mortality Risk by early infant feeding practices Source: Edmond KM et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2007. 86:1126-31

  13. Long term Impact of BREASTFEEDING Subjects who were breastfed experienced lower mean blood pressure and total cholesterol, as well as higher performance in intelligence tests. Prevalence of overweight/obesity and type-2 diabetes was lower among breastfed subjects. WHO, 2007

  14. Optimal Infant and Young Child Feeding • Starting breastfeeding within one hour of birth • Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months • Introducing appropriate and adequate complementary feeding after 6 months along with Continued breastfeeding for two years or beyond • WHO: 2/3rd of all under five deaths are related to POOR FEEDING.

  15. Feeding Practices NFHS 3 (First Year)

  16. Trends in 3 indicators

  17. State of IYCF in AP And Some other indicators

  18. Feeding practices in AP and neighbors

  19. Initiation of breastfeeding within one hour of birth - District wise in AP( DLHS 3) 0-29% scores as Red; 30-49% as Yellow; 50-89% scores as Blue; 90-00% scores as Green.

  20. Exclusive breastfeeding in first six months - District wise in AP( DLHS 3) 0-11% scores as Red; 12-49% as Yellow; 50-89% scores as Blue; 90-00% scores as Green.

  21. NFHS 3 : AP Some other indicators

  22. How many women know aboutfamily planning?

  23. High-risk births have higher mortality rates

  24. Full Immunization Coverage by StatePercentage of children 12-23 months

  25. Trends in Vaccination CoveragePercentage of children 12-23 months receiving vaccinations

  26. How many children receive anganwadi centre services?Percentage of age-eligible children in areas covered by an anganwadi centre receiving services

  27. What Can We Do to Change ?

  28. PM’s Council on India’s Nutrition Challenges decidedon 24 Nov 2010 • “..The ICDS requires strengthening and restructuring. “..with special focus on pregnant and lactating mothers and children under three.” • A nationwide campaign to educate people “…. against malnutrition so as to address issues of status of women, the care of pregnant mothers and children under two, breastfeeding, and the importance of balanced nutrition, health, hygiene and sanitation….”

  29. Some basics…. • Universalisation of reach to under two: Food, including for infants, breastfeeding , services and Care. • For enhancing exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months mothers and babies MUST stay together, rest, food, stay at home..time for caring their baby. • For this we must have maternity benefits, women have to go to work ( IGMSY Scheme is one such action Two districts from AP West Gadavrai, and Nalgonda are included ) • Skilled support in health systems or at home • “Not enough milk” is a universal feeling among women which can be improved if we could build their confidence…this can be solved by “counselling” • Strict enforcement of the Infant Milk Substitutes, Feeding Bottles and Infant Foods (Regulation of Production, Supply and Distribution) Act, 1992, and Amendment Act 2003.) Recent letter from MOH and WCD is an example to follow up. No sponsorships of doctors by baby food companies or their related front organisations.

  30. Enhancing breastfeeding rates ? • Taking action in at least 10 areas • Policy coordination, making work IMS Act, accurate information, health care system support, outreach to all families, setting right medical curriculum, maternity entitlements, support to women during HIV and emergency situations, monitoring and evaluation….the 33 country report shows gaps in all of them.

  31. EPW Sept .2007

  32. Evidence on What Works? Lancet 2008 Analysis of global evidence • For EX.BREASTFEEDING : One to one or group counselling works for enhancing exclusive breastfeeding rates • For COMPLEMENTARY FEEDING : Education and counselling on complementary feeding in food secure homes, PLUS food supplements in food insecure homes

  33. The Critical hormone link to breastfeeding For milk ejection

  34. Cochrane review on Support for breastfeeding mothersBritton C et al. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 4. 34 trials (29,385 mother-infant pairs) from 14 countries Additional lay support was effective in prolonging exclusive breastfeeding WHO UNICEF training was effective in prolonging Exclusive breastfeeding

  35. The impact of community interventions: Improving infant feeding in rural Haryana, India The impact of community interventions: Improving infant feeding in rural Haryana, India through multiple contacts is feasible and improves uptake of other child health interventions. Health policy and Planning 2005; 20(5):328-336.

  36. What BPNI has done on this • 19 years of experience in supporting governments with planning, advocacy, monitoring the IMS Act, state capacity building etc. • Developed ‘3 in 1’ Infant and Young Child feeding Counselling A training programme, (Integrated breastfeeding , complementary feeding and infant feeding & HIV counselling) based on WHO UNICEF’s 3 courses. • Tried in Lalitpur in UP as district level intervention • Working with Haryana, Uttrakhand, AP, Punjab, and Bihar

  37. Infant and young child feeding practices before and after intervention in Lalitpur District (600 villages)

  38. Recommendations • Work on recommendations of the PM’s Council on India’s Nutrition Challenges • Home visiting for under 2s as a policy : Ensure universal coverage of key interventions including early initiation of breastfeeding , exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months, timely and appropriate complementary feeding after six months along with continued breastfeeding for two years. • Put up additional women workers as Nutrition counsellors at village level and mentors at block level • Link with growth monitoring of each child. • Ensure universal coverage of ORS and immunization. • Ensure universal coverage of maternity benefits. • Training of all workers must include skills on Breastfeeding IYCF, at least 3 day training for IYCF counsellors and 7 day for IYCF consultants. • IMS Act be effectively implemented. • Nutrition programmes should be free from conflicts of interests.

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