The National Plan of Action for Children (NPAC)-2016, drafted by the Ministry of Women and Child Development, will carry forward the goals of the last action plan, framed in 2005 for a period of five years, a senior ministry official said.
The plan seeks to address important issues pertaining to children's rights to survival, health, nutrition, education, dignity, protection and participation and invited suggestions from various stakeholders and the civil society.
"While no formal evaluation of the plan (2005) has been undertaken, many of the goals remain unfulfilled, like reducing infant mortality rate to 30 per 1000 live births and maternal mortality rate to 100 per 100,000 live births; 100 per cent coverage for rural sanitation, universalisation of early childhood care and education services, elementary education, complete abolition of child labour and child marriage by 2010," he said.
Some of the key priority areas of the NPAC-2016 includes ensuring registration of birth of all children, reducing early marriage among girls and use of social media platforms to generate awareness on internet safety.
Stunting is a consequence of malnutrition in the first
1,000 days from conception until age two. It is largely irreversible after the age of two, making those first 1,000 days critical to a child's development.
The report said that some 140,000 children under five in India die each year of diarrhoeal diseases related to the lack of these basic services.
It said that in the developing world, a lack of clean water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) is a major contributor to malnutrition and one impact of this is stunting, where severe and prolonged under-nutrition makes children shorter than normal for their age and affects their emotional, social and cognitive development.
"India has made progress on reducing child stunting, from 48 per cent of all children in 2006 to 39 per cent in 2014. However, alongside the high numbers of people without access to adequate toilets, India also has the highest concentration in the world of people practising open defecation.
WaterAid India's Policy Manager Arundati Muralidharan, said that water, sanitation and hygiene are important determinants of nutrition.
"With open defecation rampant in India, frequent diarrhoea hinders the ability of children to absorb nutrients. India has made significant efforts to improve the nutritional status of children and women, but the beneficial impact of these efforts are threatened by poor WASH.
"For our children to be healthy and well-nourished, we need both nutrition specific interventions that get essential nutrients to children, as well as nutrition sensitive interventions on WASH," she said.
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