Need and Importance of Nutrition Informatics in India: A Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Brief History of Nutrition Informatics
1.2. Impact of Legislation in the United States
1.3. Global Nutrition Informatics Applications
1.4. Food and Nutrition Landscape in India
2. Discussion
2.1. Need for Nutrition Informatics in India
2.2. Digital India Initiative
2.3. Nutrition Informatics Platforms in India
- The PM’s Overarching Scheme for Holistic Nourishment (POSHAN) Abhiyan is a comprehensive platform launched in 2018 by the National Nutrition Mission. It aims to improve nutritional outcomes for children, pregnant women and lactating mothers. Its purpose is to address malnutrition, undernutrition, anemia, low birth weight babies and stunting of children’s growth through coordination of services through the first 1000 days of life, from conception to the child’s second birthday. One of the key aims of POSHAN Abhiyan is to promote coordination of nutrition action plans at the state, district, and block levels. Convergence action plan (CAP) committees have been created to plan, coordinate, and operationalize services across multiple departments and to assess outcomes and impacts in the community [53].
- Integrated Child Development Services—Common application software (CDS-CAS) introduced by POSHAN Abhiyan is a web and mobile phone-based application to improve nutrition outcomes, service delivery and program management. The application enables Anganwadi workers (AWWs) to track service delivery and make informed decisions by facilitating AWWs in their job tasks and responsibilities, helps supervisors to assess and offer feedback to them. The ICDS-CAS has three components—a mobile-based application for AWWs, one for supervisors, and a web-based dashboard for program officials. It auto plots the growth chart on the mobile application, enabling growth monitoring of children, auto-generates a task list, and is useful in counseling during home visits. The home visit scheduler enables AWWs to focus on the clients. Growth monitoring devices (GMDs) ensure accurate records of weight and height. Children six months to six years of age are weighed, and their height is recorded every month to monitor their growth trend, following which SMS alerts are sent to parents of children recording static growth. AWWs reported challenges in using the application largely related to the application, hardware or network issues [54,55]. POSHAN Abhiyan has developed educational activities for Anganwadi workers (AWW) and their supervisors through the training and capacity-building program. For this training, workers are provided with smartphones loaded with monitoring software available in fifteen languages. Training is conducted through twenty-one thematic modules, available through a web-based portal and utilizing an incremental learning approach (ICA) [56]. Furthermore, assessing program outcomes requires accurate and consistent data on food consumption and micronutrient content of foods consumed. All related data tools and aids for this task must be available through a single easily accessible platform [57].
- Anemia Mukt Bharat Dashboard is an example of data collection through POSHAN Abhiyan programs. This initiative collects data on six interventions, all of which focus on the prevention of anemia. These programs include the provision of iron and folic acid supplements to children, adolescents, women of child-bearing age, and pregnant and lactating women; the annual National Deworming Day program for children one to nineteen years of age; a year-round behavior change communication campaign, targeting practices related to anemia prevention; anemia testing and treatment for pregnant women and school-going adolescents; provision of iron and folic acid fortified foods in government-funded health programs; and screening and treatment of non-nutritional causes of anemia with a focus on malaria, hemoglobinopathies and fluorosis [58].
- Jan Andolan Dashboard is another example of a mobile application that reports on community-based events, social and behavioral change events, and district-planned activities [59].
Data on the nutritional status of children in India are often only available at the national and state levels, with very little data present at the district level. POSHAN has generated district nutrition profiles (DNPs) for the 640 districts of India to facilitate evidence-based discussions about undernutrition. DNPs provide a snapshot of the state of nutrition in each district [60]. Besides POSHAN Abhiyan data, several other nutrition platforms established to provide and monitor nutrition analytics. - The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) is charged with ensuring safe, healthy, sustainable and wholesome food for the people in India. To this end, the agency has initiated many efforts under the Eat Right India program. The food safety measures, such as establishing a hygiene-rating system for restaurants and catering establishments and sustainability initiatives aimed at promoting environment-friendly food production practices and building consumer awareness of healthy food choices. Programs like Eat Right Campus and Eat Right School were initiated to target individuals in workplaces, colleges, universities, institutes, hospitals, tea estates and jails, as well as children in schools. The Eat Right Toolkit has also been launched and is disseminated by trained health workers [61].
- The National Institute of Nutrition (NIN)’s Nutrition Atlas utilizes data from sources like the National Family Health Survey, the National Nutrition Monitoring Bureau, and the World Health Organization (WHO). NIN’s Nutrition Atlas provides information and data on the population’s nutritional status at state and national levels. It gives an overview of nutrition-related deficiencies, disorders and prevalence rates in various parts of the country. It also provides information on nutrients, nutrient-rich foods, nutritional deficiency and disorders. This dashboard also provides temporal trends on undernutrition, overweight, obesity and communicable and non-communicable diseases [62].
- Nutrify India Now is a mobile app developed by the NIN, which guides in assessing the nutrients provided by foods consumed. It contains comprehensive nutritional information on Indian foods and on common Indian recipes to track total calories, protein, vitamins and minerals. The app enables users to look up foods and ingredients rich in any specific nutrient of interest. The database includes the names of raw foods in 17 Indian languages and uses Indian guidelines set forth by the Indian Council of Medical Research. This app is available as a free download in online app stores [63].
- Tata Trusts, a private international holding company with corporate headquarters in Mumbai, collaborated with NIN to establish Tata-NIN Center for Excellence in Nutrition. This center aims to create a database on the production, distribution and intake of foods in India and their relationship to disorders of nutritional excess or deficiency. The center will also support research on nutrition and health across multiple domains [64].
- Nutrition India is the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare’s dashboard on the child, adolescent and maternal nutrition. It compiles nutrition information from national surveys and the Health Management Information System (HMIS). This tool provides maps, tables and trends at the district, state and national levels [65]. One such platform is the Champions of Change Dashboard, which includes ranked health and nutrition data in nutritional and state data sets [66].
- The National Institute for Transforming India (NITI) Aayog State Nutrition Dashboard reports state-level information on various child nutrition parameters and compares it to ten-year averages based on the National Family Health Survey (NFHS) [67].
- Nutrition on My Radar Screen is an interactive data visualization tool that provides visualizations of data on forty-four sub-indicators used by NFHS-4 for domains of maternal and child health and nutrition. Based on the specific categorization of data points, states ranked as having good, neutral, or bad performance on a given variable [68,69].
2.4. Nutrition Informatics Workforce Needs in India
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strengths | Opportunities |
---|---|
Existing infrastructure and programs | Needs that can be addressed by NI |
Digital India Initiative | NI can help to clarify the relationships and interrelationships of diet and disease as these relate to the socio-economic and agricultural changes occurring in India on both national and regional levels. |
POSHAN Abhiyan | |
Eat Right India program - Eat Right Campus - Eat Right School - Eat Right Toolkit | Data from both national and local government sources, along with that of food industry sources can promote understanding of the drivers of food choices in various regions, how those choices affect health outcomes, and the likely efficacy of the implementation of food and nutrition policies. |
National Institute of Nutrition - Nutrition Atlas - Nutrify India Now mobile app | |
Tata-NIN Centre for Excellence in Nutrition | Data mining with NI could yield targeted evidence-based recommendations and guide interventions. |
Nutrition India dashboard on child, adolescent and maternal nutrition | |
The National Institute for Transforming India Aayog State Nutrition Dashboard | India could serve as an example to other countries as to how to promote NI to support achievement of the SDGs and other public health initiatives. |
Nutrition on my Radar Screen interactive data visualization tool | |
Weaknesses | Threats |
Limitations in workforce and training opportunities and gaps in existing data | Competing priorities in India |
The NI workforce remains undefined, and opportunities for training are very limited in developing countries. | The COVID 19 pandemic |
Standardized terminology and NI have not yet been adopted by the Indian Dietetic Association. | Responses to natural disasters |
The diversity of dietary patterns and cooking methods regionally throughout the country making identification of an “average” Indian diet challenging. | Local and regional competition for resources with varied priorities other than NI |
Gaps in data limit accurate data collection and assessment which guide expenditures to counteract stunting, wasting, anemia, obesity and non-communicable diseases. |
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Joshi, A.; Gaba, A.; Thakur, S.; Grover, A. Need and Importance of Nutrition Informatics in India: A Perspective. Nutrients 2021, 13, 1836. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13061836
Joshi A, Gaba A, Thakur S, Grover A. Need and Importance of Nutrition Informatics in India: A Perspective. Nutrients. 2021; 13(6):1836. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13061836
Chicago/Turabian StyleJoshi, Ashish, Ann Gaba, Shyamli Thakur, and Ashoo Grover. 2021. "Need and Importance of Nutrition Informatics in India: A Perspective" Nutrients 13, no. 6: 1836. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13061836
APA StyleJoshi, A., Gaba, A., Thakur, S., & Grover, A. (2021). Need and Importance of Nutrition Informatics in India: A Perspective. Nutrients, 13(6), 1836. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13061836