ISLAMABAD: The Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) has served over 770,000 women and children under the Benazir Nashonuma initiative so far through provision of health and nutrition services.
Among the total beneficiaries, a total of 382,900 pregnant and lactating women (PLW) and 387,400 children have been facilitated so far, the official news agency reported.
According to an official source, these beneficiaries were served through the network of over 488 Nashonuma Centres across the country.
The Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) intervention of Benazir Nashonuma was designed in August 2020 to increase the uptake of health and nutrition services of its beneficiaries.
The primary objectives of the programme were to prevent stunting in children under two years of age, improve weight gain of pregnant women during pregnancy, reduce anaemia and micronutrient deficiencies and prevent low birth weight.
World Food Programme (WFP) is the lead implementing partner for Benazir Nashonuma which aims at addressing stunting among pregnant and lactating women and their children less than two years of age through the provision of additional cash of Rs2,000 per quarter per PLW and boy child and Rs2,500 per quarter per girl child of BISP beneficiary families.
In return, mothers are required to attend regular antenatal health checks and awareness sessions during pregnancy, consume specialised nutritious food (SNF), and take their children for immunisation and regular health check-ups.
According to the statistics, Pakistan’s high rates of malnutrition (40.2 percent stunting, 28.9 percent underweight, and 17.7 percent wasting) are indicative of an ongoing child nutrition crisis.
Such levels of malnutrition rank Pakistan as the second-highest burden country in the region. The first 1,000 days of a child’s life are a window of opportunity to lay a strong foundation for later achievements.
This time frame is a period of enormous change characterised by a high degree of plasticity in the child’s neurological development.
Investments in the early years of life are the foundation of human capital, and human capital is a key driver of economic development in the modern economy.
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