Introduction

The Mid-Day Meal (MDM) Scheme, recently revamped and renamed as Pradhan Mantri Poshan Shakti Nirman (PM POSHAN) in September 2021, is the world’s largest school feeding program. It is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under the Ministry of Education that provides one hot cooked meal to children in government and government-aided schools.

Objectives

  • Nutritional Support: Addressing “hidden hunger” and malnutrition among school-going children.
  • Educational Impact: Increasing school enrollment and attendance, and reducing drop-out rates.
  • Social Equity: Promoting social integration by having children of all castes and religions sit and eat together.
  • Economic Support: Providing a safety net for underprivileged families and creating employment opportunities, particularly for women (Cook-cum-Helpers).

Scope And Coverage

  • Target Group: Children in Classes 1 to 8 (ages 6–14 years).
  • PM POSHAN Extension: The scheme now includes children in Balvatika (pre-school classes below Class 1) in government and government-aided schools.
  • Schools Covered: Government schools, local body schools, government-aided schools, and Special Training Centers (STCs) like Madrasas and Maqtabs supported under Samagra Shiksha.

Nutritional Norms

The scheme is designed to provide roughly one-third of the daily energy requirement and half of the daily protein requirement.

ComponentPrimary (Classes 1–5)Upper Primary (Classes 6–8)
Calories450 kcal700 kcal
Protein12 g20 g
Food Grains100 g150 g
Pulses20 g30 g
Vegetables50 g75 g
Oil and Fats5 g7.5 g

Key Features Of PM POSHAN (Updates Over MDM)

  • Tithi Bhojan: A community participation concept where people provide special food to children on occasions like festivals, birthdays, or anniversaries.
  • School Nutrition Gardens: Encouraging schools to grow their own vegetables and fruits (Kitchen Gardens) to provide fresh produce and educate children about nature and nutrition.
  • Social Audit: Mandatory social audits in all districts to ensure transparency and quality control.
  • Supplementary Nutrition: The scheme allows states to provide additional items (e.g., milk, eggs, or fruits) using their own resources.
  • Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT): Cooking cost is transferred directly to the school’s account to prevent leakages.

Quality And Safety Protocols

  • Food Fortification: Use of fortified rice (Iron, Folic Acid, Vitamin B12), double-fortified salt (Iron and Iodine), and fortified oils.
  • Testing: Mandatory testing of food samples by accredited laboratories (NABL/FSSAI) to ensure nutritional and safety standards.
  • Hygiene: Strict protocols for “Cook-cum-Helpers” regarding handwashing, clean utensils, and safe storage of food grains.

Pediatric And Public Health Linkages

  • Weekly Iron and Folic Acid Supplementation (WIFS): Coordination with the Ministry of Health to provide Blue IFA tablets (school-aged) or Pink IFA tablets (adolescents) every Monday.
  • National Deworming Day (NDD): Biannual administration of Tablet Albendazole (400mg) in schools.
  • Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK): Utilizing the meal time or school presence for health screening for the “4Ds” (Defects, Deficiencies, Diseases, Developmental delays).
  • Anemia Mukt Bharat: Integrating the school meal as a vehicle to combat nutritional anemia.

Monitoring Mechanisms

  • Automated Monitoring System (AMS): Real-time daily reporting of the number of beneficiaries via SMS or mobile apps.
  • Management Information System (MIS): A robust digital portal to track school-level data, grain stock, and fund utilization.
  • Joint Review Missions (JRM): Periodic field visits by experts and central/state officials to evaluate ground-level implementation.