The World Health Organisation had in 2006 defined severe acute malnutrition as very low weight for height visible by severe wasting, or by the presence of nutritional oedema.
"We are devising a separate policy for severe acute malnourished children which will be out in October," Women and Child Development Secretary RK Shrivastava said at a press briefing.
According to Dipa Sinha, an activist from the Right to Food Campaign, the country doesn't have a protocol for treating a majority of SAM children.
As per the National Family Health Survey (NFHS) 4, 7.5 per cent of total children were found to be severely wasted, up from 6.4 during NFHS 3. The total number of such children in the country is at 93 lakh.
The National Nutrition Policy, 1994, deals with protein energy malnutrition, iron deficiency, iodine deficiency, vitamin A deficiency and low birth weight children. SAM as a condition was identified only in subsequent years.