Sunday, 30 April 2017

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene and human development in India

Dr. Devendra Kothari
Population and Development Analyst
Forum for Population Action

Fixing dreadful sanitation in India requires not just building lavatories but also changing habits.
The Economist

Clean and adequate drinking water, sanitation, and hygiene, also referred as WASH, are all essential ingredients to ensure human development. The data from the World Health Organization and UNICEF, among others, indicate that it is the poorest, the young and the women\girls and infants who suffer most from poor WASH. [1]  An investment to improve WASH services, therefore, means good health including lower morbidity as well as mortality and higher levels of school achievement hence greater productivity. As such, policies, institutions and infrastructure to improve WASH services are getting priority in the national development agenda.

India should build 'toilets before temples’, Narendra Modi said in a pre-election speech to mark the birthday of Mahatma Gandhi in 2013. To accelerate the efforts to achieve universal sanitation coverage and to put focus on hygiene, the Prime Minister Modi launched the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan (Clean India Movement) on October 2, 2014. In addition to clean the streets and roads, its main objective is to reduce or eliminate open defecation through construction of individual, cluster and community toilets by 2019, as a fitting tribute to the 150th Birth Anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. The mission also makes an initiative of establishing a mechanism of monitoring latrine use.

No doubt, WASH inputs are foundations for human development. Yet for a large section of humanity in India these foundations are not in place. Despite massive outlays for drinking water and sanitation in last couple of decades, millions of Indians lack access to these basic services. Every day, millions of women and young girls collect water for their families — a ritual that reinforces gender inequalities in employment and education.   Only 47 per cent of households have a source of water within the premises while 53 per cent of households travel more than a kilometre in rural areas and more than 100 meters in urban areas to fetch their supplies, as per the findings of Census 2011. In addition, poor water supply has obvious health costs for both urban and rural households, since only one in three households are supplied ‘treated’ water in the country. [2]  This problem is further compounded by lack of access to sanitation. About half of total households in India still defecate in open. This situation is particularly piquant for women and girls.  It is estimated that around 290 million women in India in 2011, the worst sufferers of open defecation, continue with the age-old practice even after 25 years of economic reforms. (As per the most recent Swachhta Status Report of the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO), in 2015, more than half of the rural population of the country still defects in open – a major public health and sanitation problem.) Further, only 51% of the households have drainage connectivity with two third have the closed drainage. It means around 49 per cent of total households in India are not connected with drainage system at all inviting lots of health related problems. [3]  This is a very sorry state of affairs for a country which is the fourth largest economy in the world.  Again there are wide regional variations. All the 10 major States of the country differ widely in the flush toilet facilities. More than half of households in Gujarat have flush latrines, while only 20 per cent households in Bihar are lucky to have that facility. 

The combination of poverty, poor health and lack of WASH services means that children from un-served homes, miss school more frequently than those whose families do benefit from improved drinking water and sanitation services. The resulting lack of education and social development further marginalizes the children and reduce their future chances of self-development. [4] Hence, any improvement in access to toilet facilities, water, electricity and LPG is likely to result in a considerable reduction in domestic drudgery especially for girls/women, freeing up their time for other activities including schooling and perusing professional life.

In addition, an investment in WASH facilities is urgently needed to minimizing the impact antimicrobial resistance. India is seized of the challenges of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), noted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India. [5] It is because unclean water, lack of sanitation and poor hygiene are responsible for the transmission of diarrhea, cholera, typhoid, dengue, Chikungunya and several parasitic infections; and thousands of people die every year due to such diseases. To manage, these diseases antibiotics are being used on a large scale.

AMR occurs when the effectiveness of antimicrobial drugs – including antibiotics – is diminished due to mutations in infectious bacteria. This happens when antibiotics are ill-regulated and overused, or when they are used inappropriately or for non-human health. Bacterial mutations and the superbugs they create make treating basic infections such as skin sores or diarrhoea next to impossible. They also make surgery risky. If present trends persist, by mid-century AMR will kill more people than cancer, noted by Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director of WHO South-East Asia Region. [6]

In 2010, India was the world’s largest consumer of antibiotics for human health at 12.9 x 109 units (10.7 units per person). The scale-up in antibiotic use in India has been enabled by rapid economic growth and rising incomes, which have not translated into improvements in water, sanitation, and public health. Antibiotics continue to be prescribed or sold for diarrheal diseases and upper respiratory infections for which they have limited value.

How to mange AMR? Many factors contribute to how antimicrobials are used. Therefore, a multidisciplinary approach is needed to develop, implement and evaluate interventions to promote optimal use of antimicrobials and improve infection control programmes. [7]

So where does water, sanitation and hygiene come in? Clean water and sanitation are low-cost solutions to India’s gravest health threat and human as well as skill development   agenda. [8] India lags on basic public health measures.  Immunization rates (as measured by diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis [DPT3]) coverage in India (72%) lag behind those in Brazil (95%), China (99%), and Indonesia (85%). The percentage of the population with access to improved sanitation facilities in India (36%) was far lower than the percentage in Brazil (81.3%), China (65.3%), and Indonesia (58.8%). Under the Swacch Bharat Abhiyan (Clean India Program), the government has committed to providing toilets and improving sewage systems, but these measures will take time to implement.

Government of India must hasten efforts to achieve safe water and sanitation for all. Communities lacking clean water and effective sanitation should be identified in both rural and urban areas, and steps taken to ameliorate their situation. This could mean treating water at its point of use or systematizing the operation and maintenance of local water supply systems. It could also mean investing in water supply systems to serve unreached populations. At the same time, access to safely-managed toilets should be increased by investing in and building them, and by promoting behavioral change aimed at ending open defecation as well as promoting hand-washing practices. [9]

It is suggested that the rural employment guarantee scheme (NREGA), which is responsibility of Panchayats Raj Institutions, should be used to improve the basic amenities like water, sanitation and hygiene in rural areas. And the fund allocated to the Smart Cities Mission could be used mainly to develop the basic WASH facilities in urban areas.

In short, clean water and sanitation form the backbone of an effective human development agenda, as argued by the Johns Hopkins University Water Institute. However, the challenges of providing these services in a large and heterogeneous country can be vast. Clean drinking water and sanitation are certainly not cheap. The cost of implementing these for all of India will be very large. Of course, not doing it will also have huge financial implications in terms of health and socio-economic development costs. But the big question remains – will the policy makers acquiesce?


[1] Refer article – WASH: water supply, sanitation and hygiene Human rights that are crucial to health and development at:http://www.unicef.org/wash/files/1_WSSCC_JMP_Fact_Sheets_1_UK_LoRes.pdf.

[2] Census of India 2011 –Tables on Houses, Household Amenities and Assets, Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India

[3] Kothari Devendra. (2012). West Bengal: Household amenities with special reference to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) and their implications. Kolkata, West Bengal: UNICEF. 

[4] Refer article: Joshi, Ashish and Amadi Chioma. (2013). Impact of Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene: Interventions on Improving Health Outcomes among School Children, Journal of Environmental and Public Health Volume 2013. 

[5]Refer SEARO, WHO conference:   Combating Antimicrobial Resistance in India at http://www.searo.who.int/india/topics/antimicrobial_resistance/Combating_Antimicrobial_Resistance_in_India/en/ . Also refer article: Antimicrobial resistance in India: A review by S. Ganesh et al (J Nat Sci Biol Med.) 2013. Also refer: Refer WHO Policy Perspectives on Medicines No. 10 entitled: Containing antimicrobial resistance.

[6] Refer article - Staving off the superbugs: High-quality water and sanitation are low-cost solutions to humanity’s gravest health threat by Poonam Khetrapal Singh at:  http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/staving-off-the-superbugs-high-quality-water-and-sanitation-are-low-cost-solutions-to-humanitys-gravest-health-threat/

[7] Laxminarayan R, and Chaudhury RR. (2016). Antibiotic Resistance in India: Drivers and Opportunities for Action. PLoS Med 13(3). Also refer:
http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1001974

[8] Refer article: The importance of water, sanitation, and hygiene as keys to national development, John Hopkins Water Magazine, 2015 at: http://water.jhu.edu/index.php/magazine/climate-change-and-health-why-the-link-to-water-is-critical/.

[9] Hygiene is four times as important as clean drinking water for preventing diarrheal disease according to research published in The Lancet - medical journal.
  

Friday, 31 March 2017

India must go for gender equality

 Dr. Devendra Kothari
Population and Development Analyst
Forum for Population Action

Gender equality is more than a goal in itself. It is a precondition for meeting the challenges of reducing poverty, promoting sustainable development and building good governance.
Kofi Annam
Former UN Secretary General

  
It is impossible to think about the welfare and sustainable development of India unless the condition of women is improved. It is impossible for a bird to fly on only one wing”, noted Swami Vivekananda  some hundred years ago. Addressing about 6,000 women Sarpanchs (a Sarpanch is an elected head of a village-level statutory institution called the panchayat) from across the country on International Women’s Day 2017, Prime Minister Modi said, "If women, who are 50 per cent of the country's population, participate and are included in the nation - building process, our country can achieve great heights."

So, how is women's status in India? No doubt, in many ways, today is the best time in modern history of India to be a girl. Opportunities for a girl's successes are as unlimited as her dreams. Girls are defying all odds and showing Killer Instincts. PV Sindhu, Sakshi Malik and Dipa Karmakar became the unlikely heroines and saved the country's pride from returning empty-handed from the Rio Olympics (2016) for the first time since Barcelona 1992. In other words, today's India offers a lot of opportunities to women, with women having a voice in everyday life, the business world as well as in political life.

Yet an alarm is sounding, revealing a disturbing portrait of millions of girls missing and others struggling.[1]  Though India is moving away from the male dominated culture, discrimination is still highly visible in rural as well as in urban areas, throughout all strata of society. While women are guaranteed equality under the constitution, legal protection has a limited effect, where patriarchal traditions prevail.[2]

With the whole world celebrating International Women’s Day with great pomp and show, it would be only apt to refer three or four  incidences which took place in the first three months of this year to describe the position and space Indian women especially the young ones occupy today.

We live in the age where tweets, WhatsApp posts and Face Book status updates have taken over as news. Often, it is mindless celebrity gossip and random tripe, but occasionally it leads to something more troubling. Trolling of Dangal actor Zaira Wasim, martyr’s daughter Gurmehar Kaur and teenager singer sensation Nahid Afrin exposes our biased mind about women’s achievements.

The controversy surrounding Zaira Wasim – who was trolled on social media for her success in the film and meeting Jammu & Kashmir chief minister Mehbooba Mufti, who described her as a Kashmiri role model – has only exposed the bigotry and hypocrisy of the pro-separatist lobby in Kashmir and elsewhere. The cheap trolling suggests that believing Muslims are not willing to accept a boy-cut hair girl without burqa as their role model. She was subjected to sexist abuse. The pressure heaped on the 16-year-old forced her to tender an apology for her success. She went on to say, 'I am being projected as a role model for Kashmiri youth. I want to make it very clear that I do not want anyone to follow in my footsteps or even consider me as a role model...'

Similar kind of trolling happened to Gurmehar Kaur, the English literature student of Delhi University and daughter of an Army martyr, who had found herself at the centre of a social media storm over her stand supporting freedom of speech by saying that war had killed her father, not Pakistan, and for challenging ABVP (all India student organization affiliated to the RSS), withdrew from the campaign and opted out from the mega march against violence.[3] Kaur sought privacy, tweeting, ‘I've been through a lot and this is all my 20year self could take’. Sources said after having faced rape threats and vitriol on Twitter, Kaur left for her hometown, Jalandhar.

Lastly, just days after a Muslim girl from Karnataka was trolled and slammed for singing Hindu devotional songs, a pamphlet was issued against the 16-year-old singer Nahid Afrin from Assam, the winner of a TV talent show, by 46 clerics to stop her from performing in public.

Against the backdrop of such wholesale bigotry and misogyny, these young girls are indeed a role model for youth especially females across the country – and should be encouraged to express their views.

The targeting young girls (or women) reflect the height of emerging intolerance in the country. How can opinions be suppressed like this? Our Constitution gives all citizens freedom of speech and difference of opinion does not mean that attempts should be made to muzzle voices with uncivilized threats.

Recently, an Indian movie (Lipstick under my burkha), made by an Indian woman (Alankrita), about Indian women was blocked from Indian theaters by an Indian man (Pahlaj Nihalani, Chairman of the national censor board) even as it collected awards at international film festivals. In the movie four feisty women in a small-town of India try to chase their little dreams, desires and fantasies through secret acts of rebellion.  It appears that even the government statutory bodies like the Central Board of Film Certification are very interested in perpetuating the male gaze, and anything that is an alternative point of view makes them uncomfortable. I think everyone dreams what they do not get or want to have in reality, if makers of films trying to show facts about life of women/men why some people in the name of society and to prove their ego ban such efforts. 

It appears that female's abhivyakti (expression), khvaab (dream), or kalpana (fantasy) frightens us. And we want to regulate it by hook and crook. In recent years, we have seen a spate of honor killings in the country (the honor killing is defined as a death that is awarded to a woman of the family for marrying against the parent’s wishes, having extramarital and premarital relationships, marrying within the same gotra (clan) or outside one’s caste, etc. Honor killing is different from the dowry deaths that are also a very common practice in India), especially in the North India. According to the official data, between 2001 and 2015, love/marriage was the main recorded reason for such murders, suicides, abducting women and culpable homicide cases. On an average, there are seven murder cases, 14 suicides and 47 kidnapping cases (mostly because somebody eloped with kith and kin and others) every day. Terror, on the other hand, killed 3 to 4 people, including civilians and security forces, in the same period.




It appears women are not born, but made. What better than India to exemplify this statement by Simone de Beauvoir. [4]  Therefore the chains that tie women down are not only external but are welded together invisibly by dint of growing up in what is still a patriarchal society. In order for women to free themselves from these shackles they need to be made aware that they are there in the first place, and this is where de Beauvoir’s ideas are unfortunately still of relevance today. Even if society’s mores have moved on from those described by de Beauvoir around 70 years ago, the essential remains the same.

Most of us will agree with de Beauvoir that women should not allow themselves to be limited by other people’s ideas of what they are or how they should behave or what they should look like. But this needs an enabling or conducive environment.We have to recognize that we can control a woman’s body, lock her in the house, cover her face with a veil, but her mind cannot be truly domesticated.

"Today women are more eager to learn new things in their workplace. They have proved to be more sincere". And they know how to mobilize resources to complete an assigned task. Hence, we have to create conducive environment where women can chase big dreams and contribute country’s welfare and development. .
 
In my paper, Empowering Women in India: Need for a Feminist Agenda, it is argued that there is an urgent need to formulating a feminist agenda to empower women living in highly patriarchal and traditional surroundings with several obstacles. [5] The ‘agenda’ is based on the premises that no doubt efficient policing, stringent punishments and legal measures would reduce the incidences of crime against women but these cannot eliminate growing gender inequality in India unless and until the mindset of the society is changed. The article suggests that women-centred reproductive health care along-with enlarged education and employment opportunities for females may alter patriarchal constructs despite strong structural resistance. And this feminist agenda will contribute significantly towards women’s empowerment and reduce gender gap significantly.

Here the State and society have to swing to their side, like the Assam chief minister, the Union law minister and a chorus of other voices spoke for Nahid Afrin, defending her from the clerics. After getting support Afrin, who was seen in the famous reality TV show Indian Idol, said “she is not afraid of the threat and will continue to pursue her dream of making it big in the music industry.” 

From small villages to big cities, snug families to urban alienation, young women are going the extra mile to earn their living and carve out new careers. They need holistic skilling solutions and last-mile connectivity to chase their dreams. In her new  book, The End of Karma: Hope and Fury Among India’s Young, Somini Sengupta, a former New Delhi bureau chief for The New York Times, explores today’s India through portraits of seven young people who, despite many obstacles, aspire to mobility and opportunity. Hope India’s policy makers as well as public at large are listening.




[1] See my post: India confronts epidemic of missing girl children at -- http://kotharionindia.blogspot.in/2016/08/india-confronts-epidemic-of-missing.html

[2] Refer article Women Situation in India at: ttp://www.saarthakindia.org/womens_situation_india.html

[3] In the raging debate on the right to freedom of expression, LSR student Gurmehar Kaur, the daughter of Captain Mandeep Singh, who died in a Kashmir terror attack, was seen holding a placard that reads, "Pakistan did not kill my father, war did".

[4] The Second Sex, the classic manifesto of the librated women by Simone de Beauvoir, was first published in 1949. Never before had the case for female liberty or empowerment been so forcefully and successfully argued. De Beauvoir believed   that “one is not born, but rather becomes, a woman.”  Also refer article by Maureen Youngere:  “One is not born a woman, but becomes one” at http://standardissuemagazine.com/voices/one-born-woman-becomes-one/

[5] Kothari, Devendra. 2014. “Empowering women in India: Need for a Feminist Agenda”, Journal of Health Management, 16 (2), pp 233-43. Also refer  my post: India confronts epidemic of missing girl children at -- http://kotharionindia.blogspot.in/2016/08/india-confronts-epidemic-of-missing.html

Tuesday, 28 February 2017

India: Human development and nutrition

Dr. Devendra Kothari
Population and Development Analyst
Forum for Population Action


India must convert its young population to a competitive advantage, and nutrition is one of the most important stimulants to that outcome.


Nutrition plays a critical role in human resource development since deficiencies in essential nutrients lead to malnutrition, which affects an individual's mental and physical state, resulting in poor health and poor work performance. In addition, a hungry, malnourished child may have mild to serious learning disabilities, resulting in poor school performance; a sick, poorly nourished individual will not respond well to treatment, could lose many working hours and may continue to drain family and national resources. Thus, malnutrition may undermine investments in education, health and other development sectors.

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India has released the results from the first phase of the National Family Health Survey-4 (NFHS-4), conducted in 2015-16. The results indicate that fewer children are dying in infancy and early childhood. After the last round of National Family Health Survey in 2005-06, infant mortality has declined for which trend data are available. All States/Union Territories have rates below 51 deaths per 1,000 live births, although there are considerable variations. [1]

However, NFHS-4 reveals that India’s high economic growth rate in the past decade has not been fully reflected in the health status of its people with 20 per cent of its population undernourished. More than half of the children and women are still anaemic.

The “Global Nutrition Report 2016” collaborates the findings of the NFHS-4. It once again demonstrates India’s slow overall progress in addressing chronic malnutrition, manifest in stunting (low weight for age), wasting (low weight for height), micronutrient deficiencies and over-weight. “Our track record in reducing the proportion of undernourished children over the past decade has been modest at best, and lags what other countries with comparable socio-economic indicators have achieved”, as noted by  Vinita Bali, Director, Alliance for  Improved Nutrition.[2]

According to the Report, in a ranking of countries from lowest to highest on stunting, India ranks 114 out of 132 countries, with the incidence of stunting at 38.7 per cent, compared with Germany and Chile at 1.3 per cent and 1.8 per cent, respectively. Even Bangladesh and Nepal rank marginally higher than India. On wasting, India ranks 120 out of 130 countries, at 15.1 per cent, compared with Australia and Chile at number 1 and 2, with 0 per cent and 0.3 per cent, and South Sudan at 130 with 22.7 per cent. On the prevalence of anaemia in women of reproductive age, India ranks 170 out of 185 countries at 48.1 per cent, compared with Senegal which is the worst at 57.5 per cent and the U.S. which is the best at 11.9 per cent.

The segments most at risk continue to be adolescent girls, women and children, and among them Scheduled Castes and Tribes are the worst off, reflecting the insidious economic and socio cultural deprivation so prevalent in India. The most important national effort is yet to address these deficiencies in India.Despite being one of the biggest producers of food supplies, India is home to 25 percent of the world’s hungry poor, according to a U.N. agency.


The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) [3] makes the annual calculations of Global Hunger Index (GHI). Basing its readings on the most recent data, the 2016 GHI for India was derived from the fact that an estimated 15 per cent population is undernourished - lacking in adequate food intake, both in quantity and quality. the report states that “Countries worse than India include extremely poor African countries such as Niger, Chad, Ethiopia and Sierra Leone besides two of India's neighbors: Afghanistan and Pakistan. Other neighbors Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal and China are all ranked above India”.[4]

According to the Report that the malnutrition is a complex problem that contributes to 45 per cent of deaths among children under the age of five in India annuall. Chronically malnourished children are, on average, nearly 30 percent less literate than those who have a nutritious diet. The share of under-5 children who are `wasted' is about 15% while the share of children who are `stunted' is a staggering 39 percent. This reflects widespread and chronic lack of balanced food. This is partially reflecting the fatal synergy of inadequate nutrition and unhealthy environments.

Although India runs two of the world's biggest children's nutrition programmes, the ICDS for children under 6 years  (launched  in 1975) and the mid-day meal programme (1995) for school going kids up to the age of 14, malnutrition    continues to haunt India.

No doubt, nutrition is a big issue. Many health problems could be resolved by proper nutrition. For example, a tuberculosis control strategy that is merely treatment-based would be ineffective unless under-nutrition, which compromises immunity and leads to the latent TB infection turning active in millions, is addressed. Prof Anurag Bhargava, who has been working for decades on TB, pointed out that in India where 40 per cent of the population or about 500 million is estimated to have latent TB infection, it would be logistically impossible to treat them with drugs for 6-9 months. It is always malnutrition and vitamin deficiency that leads a person to TB. A body must have adequate vitamins, minerals and other natural substances in the food it takes to avoid TB. In other words, TB is a nutritional disease, argues Prof Bhargava, that can be prevented by placing nutrition (including adult nutrition) at the heart of the global developmental and public health agenda and implementing appropriate economic and agricultural policies, social protection measures and targeted nutritional interventions". [5]

One of the reasons for persistent under nutrition in India, despite the creation of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) in 1975 and national coverage of the Mid-Day Meal Scheme in 1995, is that there is no structure for multi-sectoral coordination which is essential to address the inter-generational and multifaceted nature of malnutrition. Both schemes should be revamped looking to the needs of beneficiaries.[6]

Of these, the intent to revamp the ICDS has already been announced by the Government and must move into action mode quickly. This must include streamlining the work in the 1.34 million anganwadi centres by investing in training the 2.5 million workers and helpers at these centres, standardizing the nutrition component of the supplementary food offered and focusing on the overall dissemination of information and education to pregnant and nursing mothers on healthy eating habits, hygiene and sanitation,

Similarly, the mid-day meal is an excellent structure to reach 120 million children with continuity and regularity. A single intervention in that scheme to focus on nutrition in addition to food will make a critical difference. This can easily be accomplished by the addition of micronutrients to cooked food or by adding universally liked and accepted products such as milk, biscuits, etc. fortified with micronutrients as a mid-morning or afternoon snack. Therefore, extend large-scale food fortification beyond salt to other staples like flour, oil, dairy, etc. and establish mandatory standards by category.

In addition, endemic poverty coupled with growing number of unwanted childbearing,[7] unemployment, lack of sanitation and safe drinking water, and lack of effective healthcare are main factors for the sorry state.
The human dividend or demographic dividend on which we are banking is actually a huge liability given that one out of every three children is born underweight and unable to realize the full potential for physical growth and cognitive development, leading to lower levels of productivity. The World Bank estimates that India loses 2-3 per cent of its annual GDP by way of lower productivity, the underlying cause of which is malnutrition.

In sum, the need to systemically address underlying causes of malnutrition in India is an urgency that cannot be postponed. Poor nutrition will fracture the dreams and aspirations of India to become a global player in manufacturing and other sectors. Hope policy makers are listening!



[1] Refer: National Family Health Survey 2015-16 (NFHS-4): states fact sheets, International Institute of Population Studies, Mumbai, 2016.


[2] Refer article by Vinita Bali: We need a Nutrition Mission at: http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/We-need-a-Nutrition-Mission/article14503108.ece

[3] The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) makes the annual calculations of GHI.

[4] For details, refer article at:, http://www.ifpri.org/news-release/india-ranked-97th-118-global-hunger-index-times-india. Also see: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/India-ranked-97th-of-118-in-global-hunger-index/articleshow/54822103.cms 

[5] Refer article: To control TB, under nutrition must be tackled’ by Rema Nagarajan (2016) at: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/To-control-TB-undernutrition-must-be-tackled/articleshow/55216307.cms

[6] For further  details, see article by Vinita Bali: We need a Nutrition Mission at: http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/We-need-a-Nutrition-Mission/article14503108.ece

[7] Kothari, Devendra. 2014. “Managing Unwanted Fertility in India: Way Forward”, Institute of Economic Growth (ed.):   National Rural Health Mission: An Unfinished Agenda, New Delhi: Book Well, pp.25-36. Also refer, author’s post entitled - India: Why population matters? at http://kotharionindia.blogspot.in/2015/04/india-why-population-matters.html