Despite record food output globally, the peril of hunger is still with us. Around 45% of deaths among children <5 years of age are due to undernutrition. They occur mostly in Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs), including the Indian subcontinent. For India, the recent findings of the fifth National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5 from 2019-20), Phase 1, further highlights the diminutive progress made in tackling the issue of malnutrition. It brings in the good news for states like Bihar who reduced stunting (important indicator for assessing chronic malnutrition) by 5.4% and bad news for previously well-performing states like Gujarat and Maharashtra who worsened in the same category by 0.5% and 0.8% respectively (compared to NFHS-4 from 2015-16). NFHS-5 fact sheets, however, don’t include the indicators recording the performance of the Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS) that contributes significantly to deciding the quality of nutrition service delivery at the ground level. Overcoming systematic challenges faced by the ICDS through a careful evaluation of the existing mechanisms must be attended with severity.