India’s recent Nature Medicine publication (ICMR‑INDIAB survey) shines a powerful light on what has long been suspected: our diets are dangerously imbalanced. Among 18,090 adults studied, 62% of daily calories came from carbohydrates, while protein made up just 12% and fats 25%. Critically, replacing just 5% of carb calories with protein from dairy, legumes, egg or fish was correlated with significantly lower odds of type 2 diabetes and prediabetes.
What this suggests is not just a statistical curiosity, but a pathway out of India’s metabolic crisis. Carbohydrate-heavy diets — especially refined grains, sugars — are fueling rising obesity, insulin resistance, and NCDs. In contrast, dairy protein stands out as a viable, culturally acceptable, and high-bioavailability option to shift the macro balance.
The Hidden Hunger
Malnutrition, Protein Deficit & Stunting While our elite desserts markets flourish, large segments of India remain entrapped in protein poverty and childhood undernutrition.
• Stunting affects ~35.5% of children under 5, and wasting ~18.7% (NFHS / Global Hunger Index).
• Meta‑analyses estimate pooled stunting prevalence ~41% in adolescents, underweight ~32.6%.
• In NNMB / rural surveys, the risk of quality protein inadequacy among children (1–6 years) and pregnant women is ~66–74%.
• Surveys suggest 73% of Indians are protein deficient; only ~10% meet adequate dietary protein standards.
Many rural households still derive ~60% of their protein from cereals — low in digestibility, missing essential amino acids. Dairy: A Strategic Lever, Not a Luxury Dairy holds a unique position in India’s food and social landscape. It is culturally acceptable, locally producible, and matches multiple nutritional needs — protein, calcium, vitamins, bioactive peptides, and more.
A modest shift toward dairy-based protein could help redress both overconsumption of refined carbs and underconsumption of quality protein. This requires more than rhetoric:
1. Strengthen procurement & supply chain.
2. Ensure equitable access for rural/low-income households.
3. Promote dairy through nutrition programs (ICDS, mid-day meals).
4. Supportive policy with tax relief, infrastructure investment, and integration with health initiatives.
From Crisis to Opportunity
India’s health and nutrition trajectory is at a tipping point. The double burden looms — persistent undernutrition and rising NCDs. Yet the new ICMR findings show a clear pathway: better protein quality = better metabolic health. Dairy isn’t a panacea, but it is one of the most scalable, culturally resonant tools in India’s nutrition arsenal. It’s time policies, investments and public discourse treat milk not as a commodity, but as a strategic public health investment. Let’s shift from sugar-laced growth to nourishing growth — for children, mothers, and the future of India.
Source : Blog by Kuldeep Sharma Chief editor Dairynews7x7 Oct 2nd 2025
Reference : Read Research article here