학술논문

Production of Fortified Food for a Public Supplementary Nutrition Program: Performance and Viability of a Decentralised Production Model for the Integrated Child Development Services Program, India / 生產營養強化食品為公眾補充計畫:印度整合兒童發展服務的去集中化生產模式的成果及可行性
Document Type
Article
Source
Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition / 亞太地區臨床營養期刊. Vol. 23 Issue S1, ps20-s28. 9 p.
Subject
去集中補充食品生產
可行性
女權
印度
整合兒童服務
decentralised complementary food production
viability
women empowerment
India
ICDS
Language
英文
ISSN
0964-7058
Abstract
Integrated Child Development Services in India through its supplementary nutrition programme covers over 100 million children, pregnant and lactating women across the country. Providing a hot cooked meal each day to children aged between 3-6 years and a take-home ration to children aged between 6-36 months, pregnant and lactating women, the Integrated Child Development Services faces a monumental task to deliver this component of services of desired quality and regularity at scale. From intermediaries or contractors who acted as agents for procuring and distributing food to procurement directly from large food manufacturers to using women groups as food producers, different State Governments have adopted a variety of strategies to procure and distribute food, especially the take-home ration. India's Supreme Court, through its directive of 2004, encouraged the Government to engage women's groups for the production of the supplementary food. This study was conducted to determine the operational performance, economic sustainability and social impact of a decentralized production model for India's Supplementary Nutrition Program, in which women groups run smallscale industrialised units. Data were collected through observation, interviews and group discussions with key stakeholders. Operational performance was analysed through standard performance indicators that measured consistency in production, compliance with quality standards and distribution regularity. Assessment of the economic viability included cost structure analysis, five-year projections, and financial ratios. Social impact was assessed using a qualitative approach. The pilot unit has demonstrated its operational performance and cost-efficiency. More data is needed to evaluate the scalability and sustainability of this decentralised model.