NITI Aayog is working with the ministry of women and child development to develop an Aadhar-based real time monitoring mechanism of various malnutrition parameters to understand their progress over the years.
Officials said the Aayog started an extensive process of discussion with all stakeholders to understand issues related to malnutrition and device appropriate policies to eliminate them.
The first set of consultations, in which Tata Group's Chairman Emeritus Ratan Tata also participated, began on Monday.
More From This Section
"The meeting -- India's malnutrition: A call to action -- was on challenges of malnutrition and the deliberation focused on breaking the cycle of under-nutrition, disease, infections and mortality," a source said.
A senior government official, who participated in the meeting, said that now NITI Aayog will discuss with the Women and Child Development (WCD) Ministry on how Aadhaar data can be utilised for more effective functioning of the National Nutrition Mission.
National Nutrition Mission, run by WCD Ministry, focuses on delivery of supplementary nutrition in a targeted manner with real-time IT-based monitoring on the ground level.
The mission has been uniquely designed with participation of national and multi-national entities providing assistance in various forms. It will put in place a comprehensive set of measures to address complex issues of malnutrition and focus on outcome monitoring, training and capacity building.
The government has allocated Rs 360 crore in 2016-17 for the mission, as against Rs 65 crore last year.
The government official said the participants also discussed the issue of inter-generational cycle associated with malnutrition where the mother is malnourished, which in turn reaches the baby, who is also born malnourished.
This would require coordinating bodies being set up at the district and village levels to provide support to effective implementation, monitoring and supervision of the programme, the official said. The government is aiming to end all forms of malnutrition by 2030.