A year after BSF Jawan's food complaint, DRDO study says 97% personnel satisfied with meals provided on duty

The study found that the food served by the BSF to its Jawans and officers was able to provide all macro and micro-nutrients as per recommended dietary allowance of the Indian Council of Medical Research.

More than a year after a Border Security Force (BSF) Jawan’s video complaining about the poor quality of food served in their regiments triggered a row, a study by the DRDO has claimed that ninety seven per cent BSF personnel have expressed “satisfaction” with the quantity and quality of meals provided to them on duty at the borders and elsewhere.

The special study was conducted by the Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Science (DIPAS) on a special commission by the BSF. Last year, the armed force unit of the country had made sure that the Jawans will be provided with food of high quality.

The study, commissioned last year, was conducted by collecting data of “food preference and satisfaction level” from eight frontiers of the force – four each from the western and the eastern command – and focused group discussion at 37 unit mess’ and cook houses.

“The report has summarised that the data…collected from 6,526 participants under eight frontiers with different terrain and geographical area indicated that 97 per cent personnel are satisfied with respect to quantity and quality of food,” the BSF said in a statement.

“The study has recorded average energy expenditure to be 3,400-3,500 kilo calories per day, while energy intake was 3,450 335 kilo calories per day (of a personnel).”

The study found that the food served by the BSF to its Jawans and officers was able to provide all macro and micro-nutrients as per recommended dietary allowance of the Indian Council of Medical Research.

The experts team, the BSF said, conducted the study by following a random sampling technique including all ranks, job profile/duties from different battalions and border out posts (BOPs) of the force.

“The assessment of food and nutrient intake has been done by food analysis, body composition, haematological profile, biochemical variable analysis, clinical examination and hand grip test,” the force said, quoting the report submitted to it recently.

The BSF had commissioned the study to determine nutrient requirements of its personnel and adequacy of their diet under deployment, along with determination of their food satisfaction level.

Earlier this week, it was reported that the paramilitary force has decided to get such a study done from a Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) lab on the recommendation of a parliamentary panel that went into the subject of food quality and quantity issues highlighted by the Jawan, constable Tej Bahadur Yadav, last year.

BSF Director General K K Sharma had told the news agency in an interview that an internal inquiry conducted by the force, in the wake of the allegations made by Yadav, had found that the quality and quantity of food being served was never an issue among its personnel.