‘Paneer kathi rolls, uttapam, sprouted dal paratha’: UNICEF suggests recipes for healthy children

UNICEF book tells how to tackle problems of underweight, obesity and anaemia among children by consuming nutritious food that costs less than ₹20

November 17, 2019 11:34 am | Updated 11:42 am IST - New Delhi

MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA, 23/11/2015: Bollywood actor and UNICEF Goodwill ambassador, Amitabh Bachchan launched the media campaign on Hepatitis B along with Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, J. P. Nadda ( NOT IN PICTURE) in association with UNICEF in Mumbai on November 23, 2015. It is estimated by WHO that more than two billion people have been infected by the killer disease and over 780000 people die every year. Being one among the largest populated country in the world, India harbours with around 40 million HBV carriers._Photo: Arunangsu Roy Chowdhury

MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA, 23/11/2015: Bollywood actor and UNICEF Goodwill ambassador, Amitabh Bachchan launched the media campaign on Hepatitis B along with Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, J. P. Nadda ( NOT IN PICTURE) in association with UNICEF in Mumbai on November 23, 2015. It is estimated by WHO that more than two billion people have been infected by the killer disease and over 780000 people die every year. Being one among the largest populated country in the world, India harbours with around 40 million HBV carriers._Photo: Arunangsu Roy Chowdhury

From uttapam to sprouted dal parantha — a book by UNICEF tells how to tackle problems of underweight, obesity and anaemia among children by consuming nutritious food that costs less than ₹20.

The book has been based on the findings of the Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey 2016-18 which found that 35% of children under five are stunted, 17% are wasted and 33% are underweight.

It also found that anaemia affects 40% of adolescent girls and 18% of adolescent boys. The report also found that overweight and obesity increasingly begins in childhood with a growing threat of non-communicable diseases like diabetes (10%) in school-aged children and adolescents.

The 28-page book lists out recipes of freshly prepared foods, also giving the cost of preparation of each of them.

For tackling underweight — the books lists recipes like potato stuffed paratha, paneer kathi roll and sago cutlets while for tackling obesity — there are suggestions of sprouted dal parantha, poha and vegetable upma.

Apart from calorie count, the book gives detailed break up of protein, carbohydrate, fat, total fibre, iron, vitamin C and calcium content of the recipe

UNICEF chief Henrietta H Fore said the booklet aims to tell people what is nutritious and in what amount.

Fore said there are two stages in a person’s life when nutrition is extremely important.

“The first is in the first 1000 days of a child and for that we need to reach young mothers and second is when you are in adolescence and for that we need to go into schools,” Fore told PTI .

“The first one would require healthcare workers at hospitals. It is at that time you can teach a young mother about nutrition and the second one is at adolescence when it can be communicated through teachers, knowledge of nutritious food needs to be brought into schools and made part of the curriculum,” the UNICEF executive director said.

She said these types of brochures aims to remind what one should have in a packed lunch for a child.

“If every parent also has that knowledge then we will all be better in terms of what we know about nutrition and how we actually feed ourselves,” she said.

She further said the book needs to be brought into schools and made part of the curriculum.

“So that there is good nutrition and I think national nutrition plans will incorporate this but we at UNICEF will be by their side and working with them on a good communication plan,” she said.

She hoped the book is translated into regional language to improve its reach.

The supplement book that comes along with the recipe book also talks about causes and consequences of underweight, obesity and anaemia on the health of children.

It also talks about eating disorders like anorexia — voluntary self-starvation resulting in emaciation — and bulimia — recurrent episodes of binge eating followed by some kind of compensatory behaviour to prevent weight gain.

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