Despite high economic growth in recent years,
India has more stunted children than any other country in the World.
India has more stunted children than in Nigeria, Pakistan, China and the Republic of Congo combined, with 48 million under the age of five -- about 30 percent of the global total, a WaterAid report said.
Stunting is a form of malnutrition in which
children are shorter than normal for their age and is largely irreversible
after the age of two.
If they survive, they grow up physically and
intellectually weaker than their better-fed peers.
WaterAid says a lack of toilets and clean
water are causing high levels of stunting in India.
That is because high rates of open defecation
lead to contamination that can spread disease and infection.
Data collated by WaterAid showed that 140,000
children die every year from diarrhoea in India, while 76 million do not have
access to safe water and 774 million live without adequate sanitation.
"India has the highest number of people
in the world... practising open defecation, which spreads deadly diseases and
makes children more susceptible to diarrhoea and other infections," said
Megan Wilson-Jones, WaterAid health and hygiene analyst.
"So it is no surprise that so many
children in India suffer from stunted growth," she added.
Open defecation has long been a major health
and sanitation problem in India, where almost 594 million people -- nearly half
the population -- defecate in the open, according to UNICEF.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has stressed the
need to clean up India since storming to power in 2014 and has repeatedly urged
every household to have a toilet within four years to end the spread of
disease.
Nigeria ranked second with 10.3 million
stunted children while Pakistan stood third in WaterAid's study with 9.9
million.
Impoverished Bangladesh fared better than its
bigger, wealthier neighbour India, recording 5.5 million cases in its 160
million-strong population.
The country has almost eliminated open
defecation in just over a decade through a concerted campaign to build toilets.
East Timor was the country where stunting was
most prevalent.
Nearly 58 percent of the young nation's
children suffered from the condition, while Germany had the lowest rate at 1.3
percent.
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