@article{Chhabra_Rao_2014, title={Challenges and interventions in meeting delivery of nutrition in mid-day meal scheme: a pilot in district Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh}, volume={26}, url={https://iapsmupuk.org/journal/index.php/IJCH/article/view/492}, abstractNote={<p><strong>Background:</strong> Providing cooked food to about hundred million children under mid-day meal scheme has been accomplished. Focus has now shifted to delivery of nutrition since the National Food Security Act specifies statutory quantities of protein and calories. <strong>Aims & Objectives</strong>: Delivery of nutrition requires comprehensive overhaul to include interventions in area of storage, preparation and practices, stoves, human resource development and community participation. <strong>Methodology</strong>: Based on a baseline survey of 70 schools through random selection in two blocks of Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh these concerns were investigated in details for specific interventions. <strong>Results</strong>: <em>Nutrition</em>: Both Faizabad and MHRD’s all India data establish that net quantities consumed by a child (quantity served minus plate waste) cannot provide prescribed nutrition. It reiterated the fact that mid-day meal is first and major meal for most rural children. Experiments conducted to standardize quantities, consistencies and splitting meal into snack plus meal improved nutritional delivery. <em>Hygiene and food safety</em>: In both blocks food was delivered at high temperature enabling food safety standards to be met with improved hygiene and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs). <em>Human Resource</em>: A pictorial training manual was prepared to train master trainers as well as cooks. Location specific training using local idiom and practices were used and campaign was conducted to enhance community participation in 45 villages. <em>Fuel efficiency</em>: Low cost smokeless chullahs (stoves) designed locally resulted in fuel savings. High efficiency cook stoves were also tested, however their cost limits reproduction. <strong>Conclusion: </strong>Accomplishing comprehensive improvement within existing cost of conversion per child is a challenge particularly since there are no economies of scale in rural areas. The methodologies created in the pilot for hygiene and food safety, awareness and capacity building through campaigns and training, locally designed smokeless chullahs can be scaled up for improving delivery of nutrition under the scheme.</p>}, number={Supp 2}, journal={Indian Journal of Community Health}, author={Chhabra, Iksha and Rao, K Ashok}, year={2014}, month={Dec.}, pages={183–192} }