By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
India Times NowIndia Times NowIndia Times Now
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • India News
    India News
    Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies.
    Show More
    Top News
    The States Braces for Protests Over New COVID Rules
    August 29, 2021
    Massive explosion inside J&K police station leaves 8 injured
    November 14, 2025
    Huge support for tribal dances at Kerala school arts fest
    January 17, 2026
    Latest News
    Hike in commercial LPG price: Shock and resignation on food street as LPG price goes up by 42%
    May 1, 2026
    Commercial LPG 19 kg cylinders prices increased sharply in Telangana, no change in domestic LPG cost
    May 1, 2026
    India stays on USTR priority watch list on IPR
    May 1, 2026
    May Day 2026 explained: Why is Labour Day celebrated?
    May 1, 2026
  • Technology
    TechnologyShow More
    Strengthening the Team: Thryve PR Onboards Pranjal Patil as PR Executive & Project Manager
    October 1, 2025
    How to Take the Perfect Instagram Selfie: Dos & Don’ts
    October 1, 2021
    Apple iMac M1 Review: the All-In-One for Almost Everyone
    Hands-On With the iPhone 13, Pro, Max, and Mini
    September 4, 2021
    Apple VS Samsung– Can a Good Smartwatch Save Your Life?
    August 30, 2021
  • Posts
    • Post Layouts
      • Standard 1
      • Standard 2
      • Standard 3
      • Standard 4
      • Standard 5
      • Standard 6
      • Standard 7
      • Standard 8
      • No Featured
    • Gallery Layouts
      • Layout 1
      • Layout 2
      • layout 3
    • Video Layouts
      • Layout 1
      • Layout 2
      • Layout 3
      • Layout 4
    • Audio Layouts
      • Layout 1
      • Layout 2
      • Layout 3
      • Layout 4
    • Post Sidebar
      • Right Sidebar
      • Left Sidebar
      • No Sidebar
    • Review
      • Stars
      • Scores
      • User Rating
    • Content Features
      • Inline Mailchimp
      • Highlight Shares
      • Print Post
      • Inline Related
      • Source/Via Tag
      • Reading Indicator
      • Content Size Resizer
    • Break Page Selection
    • Table of Contents
      • Full Width
      • Left Side
    • Reaction Post
  • Pages
    • Blog Index
    • Contact US
    • Search Page
    • 404 Page
    • Customize Interests
    • My Bookmarks
  • Join Us
Reading: Full plate, empty nutrition? The silent deficiency affecting city children
Share
India Times NowIndia Times Now
Font ResizerAa
  • Finance ₹
  • India News
  • The Escapist
  • Entertainment
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Insider
Search
  • Home
    • India Times Now
    • Home 2
    • Home 3
    • Home 4
    • Home 5
  • Categories
    • Technology
    • Entertainment
    • The Escapist
    • Insider
    • Finance ₹
    • India News
    • Science
    • Health
  • Bookmarks
    • Customize Interests
    • My Bookmarks
  • More Foxiz
    • Blog Index
    • Sitemap
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US

Home » Full plate, empty nutrition? The silent deficiency affecting city children

FashionLifestyleTravelVacation

Full plate, empty nutrition? The silent deficiency affecting city children

Times Desk
Last updated: February 28, 2026 6:33 am
Times Desk
Published: February 28, 2026
Share
SHARE


Contents
  • What is hidden hunger?
  • The deficiencies doctors are seeing most often
    • Iron deficiency
    • Vitamin D deficiency
    • Vitamin B12 deficiency
    • Calcium and zinc gaps
  • The subtle signs parents overlook
  • Why urban homes are especially vulnerable
  • What can parents actually do?
  • It’s not about how much they eat
New Delhi:

“Doctor, my child eats well.”  It’s something paediatricians hear almost every day. The child finishes meals. Loves parathas. Drinks milk. Rarely complains. On paper, everything looks fine. However, as Dr Ravi Malik, MBBS, MD (Paediatrics), Founder & Medical Director of Malik Radix Healthcare (MRHC), explains, that’s not always the full picture.

“A child can look healthy, eat three meals a day, and still be nutritionally deficient,” he says. “We call this hidden hunger. The stomach may be full, but the body may quietly be missing essential vitamins and minerals.” And in urban India, it’s becoming more common than most parents realise.

What is hidden hunger?

Hidden hunger is not about a lack of food. It is about a lack of nutrients. A child may consume enough calories but fall short on critical micronutrients like iron, vitamin D, vitamin B12, calcium, or zinc. Growth may continue, but not optimally. Immunity weakens. Attention span drops. Energy fluctuates.

“It is undernutrition in disguise,” says Dr Malik. Because symptoms are subtle, it often goes unnoticed until a problem becomes obvious.

The deficiencies doctors are seeing most often

Iron deficiency

Iron remains one of the most common gaps in children. “It shows up as fatigue, low attention span, pale skin, or frequent headaches,” Dr Malik explains. “Many parents think the child is just distracted or lazy. In reality, low iron means the brain is not getting enough oxygen.”

A tired child who struggles to focus may not have a discipline issue; they may have a nutritional one.

Vitamin D deficiency

Children today spend far more time indoors, in classrooms, tuition centres, and in front of screens. “Vitamin D deficiency is almost epidemic,” he says. “Weak bones, frequent fractures, body aches and poor immunity often trace back to inadequate sunlight.”

A simple habit like daily outdoor time can make a significant difference.

Vitamin B12 deficiency

Particularly in vegetarian households, B12 levels can run low. “It affects nerve function and energy,” Dr Malik notes. “A child may appear dull, irritable, or mentally sluggish without any obvious illness.”

Because symptoms develop gradually, they are easy to miss.

Calcium and zinc gaps

These may not cause dramatic early symptoms. But over time, they can affect height, wound healing, and overall development.

The subtle signs parents overlook

Hidden hunger rarely announces itself loudly. Instead, it blends into everyday behaviour:

  • Unusual irritability
  • A drop in school performance
  • Frequent colds that linger
  • Poor height gain
  • Unexpected weight gain despite “normal eating”

“These are often dismissed as phases,” says Dr Malik. “Sometimes they are. But sometimes, they are signals.”

Why urban homes are especially vulnerable

Urban families rarely struggle with calorie intake. The issue is dietary quality and diversity. Delivery apps, processed foods, polished rice, refined flour, and packaged snacks have become routine. Even home-cooked meals may rely heavily on refined ingredients.

“Modern convenience has quietly reduced dietary diversity,” Dr Malik explains. Add busy schedules, rushed breakfasts, screen-time feeding, and limited outdoor play, and small gaps begin to form. Over months and years, those gaps widen.

What can parents actually do?

The solution is not extreme dieting or complicated meal plans. It is a steady, consistent correction.

Dr Malik recommends:

  • Regular paediatric check-ups and appropriate screening for iron, vitamin D, or calcium when needed
  • Building meals around variety: whole grains, seasonal fruits, green vegetables, pulses, dairy, eggs or lean proteins
  • Using fortified staples where appropriate
  • Ensuring at least 15 minutes of daily sunlight
  • Replacing sugary drinks with water, coconut water, buttermilk, or whole fruits
  • Keeping healthy snacks visible and accessible
  • Making junk food occasional, not routine
  • Involving children in food choices and preparation

“When children understand what they are eating, they value it more,” he adds.

It’s not about how much they eat

One of the biggest misconceptions in parenting is equating quantity with quality. A child finishing a large plate does not automatically mean they are nourished. “Good nutrition is not about how much a child eats,” Dr Malik says. “It is about what the body is absorbing and using.”

Micronutrient deficiencies rarely look dramatic in the beginning. That is what makes them dangerous. A child may seem fine until growth slows, immunity dips, or academic performance suffers.

Strong immunity. Steady growth. Sharper focus. Stable energy. These do not happen by accident. They are built slowly, meal by meal, habit by habit. And sometimes, the most important question is not “Is my child eating enough?” It is: “Is my child getting what their body truly needs?”





Source link

Snapchat ex-employee claims company faked growth stats to boost value
Trying to lose weight? Tamannaah Bhatia’s fitness coach says skip this popular snack
Doing everything right but not losing weight? A nutritionist explains the real cause
Bank Holiday Today: Full list of states where banks will remain closed for Guru Nanak Jayanti, Kartika Purnima
11 new expressways to be ready by 2029 in Uttar Pradesh- Check full details
TAGGED:affectingB12 deficiency symptoms kidschild fatigue causeschild growth issueschild height not increasingchild immunity problemschild low attention span nutritionchild nutrition gapschildrencitydeficiencyemptyfullhidden hunger in childrenIndian children healthiron deficiency in kidsmicronutrient deficiency Indianutritionnutritional deficienpaediatric nutrition advicepicky eater nutritionplatescreen time eating habitssilenturban child nutritionurban diet problems kidsvitamin D deficiency childrenwhy child falls sick often
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
[mc4wp_form]
Popular News

Hyderabad Weather September 11 | 42 mm rain in Hayatnagar, 10-16 mm in western city

krutikadalvibiz
krutikadalvibiz
September 11, 2025
Tusker that killed 2 persons in Sringeri taluk of Karnataka captured
Delhi’s per capita income to grow at 7.09%: Economic Survey of Delhi 2025-26
In Bihar’s Khagaria, people want to vote for development
Tom Holland injured on the sets of Spider Man: Brand New Day, rushed to hospital
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image
Global Coronavirus Cases

Confirmed

0

Death

0

More Information:Covid-19 Statistics
© INDIA TIMES NOW 2026 . All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?