"We are surprised to note that in this modern era of information technology, there is no recent official data on malnutrition. What is available is seven years old and outdated...National Family Health Survey III data of 2005-2006," the panel said.
The Committee on Estimates tabled its report titled 'Malnutrition and Infants in Mothers' in Parliament this week, in which it highlighted the absence of latest data on child health.
It said the Ministry of Health should have reduced periodicity of NFHS, which used to be held at a gap of six years, much earlier.
"It is only now that the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has proposed to conduct NFHS IV and also decided to slash the periodicity of NFHS to three years," the panel said.
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It also pulled up the government for not computerising anganwadi centres in villages and habitations connected by broadband and internet and ensure real time data flow for nutrition monitoring across India.
The IMR remains high at 44 per 1000 live births as of October 2012, it said.
Based on the available data, the committee has expressed concern that 59 per cent children under the age of five years are stunted and 3.3 per cent face severe wasting in the 100 focus districts which ranked the lowest on childhood development index in six states.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, during a speech in January last year, had described malnutrition as a "national shame".
"...The problem of malnutrition is a matter of national shame. Despite impressive growth in our GDP, the level of under-nutrition in the country is unacceptably high," he had said.