Child Nutrition Crisis

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Pakistan’s child nutrition crisis has long been treated as a welfare issue when, in reality, it is a national emergency with generational consequences. To cater to this worsening crisis, Unicef has partnered with the University of Health Sciences to launch a capacity-building programme aimed at incorporating nutrition and child health interventions into the MBBS curriculum across Punjab. The initiative began on Monday with a three-day workshop on community-based management of acute malnutrition.

Pakistan’s healthcare system cannot effectively combat malnutrition unless doctors are trained to identify and prevent it at the community level. Therefore, the importance of this initiative cannot be overstated. According to Unicef, one Pakistani children in every three suffers from malnutrition or growth-related problems, while millions remain stunted because of chronic undernourishment. In many cases, the consequences last a lifetime, trapping generations in cycles of poverty. What makes this crisis particularly alarming is that it continues despite years of policy discussions and donor-funded interventions. Pakistan’s malnutrition burden stems from a combination of poverty, food insecurity, poor maternal health, unsafe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and weak primary healthcare systems. In rural and low-income urban communities, acute malnutrition often goes undetected until children reach critical stages of illness. During the workshop, UHS Vice Chancellor Prof Ahsan Waheed Rathore emphasised that nutrition can no longer remain outside mainstream medical education. However, curriculum reform alone will not change outcomes on the ground. Pakistan’s response to malnutrition requires stronger primary healthcare and consistent public investment in nutrition programmes.

If Pakistan is serious about reversing its malnutrition burden, it must treat child nutrition as a core development priority rather than a narrow health intervention. That requires sustained financing and a functioning community health systems at the least.

Editorial Published in Express Tribune on May 20th, 2026.

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