1. Nutrition approaches and programs have to shift into an active lifecycle approach for women and girls. This means actively working towards gender equity across all settings, it includes bringing together family planning, gaps in pregnancy and delayed pregnancy for women to prevent maternal depletion. It includes working with entire families and mothers and daughters together for them to develop agency over their nutritional practices and improve access to nutrition.
2. Entire households and communities have to be encouraged, persevered and convinced to unlearn harmful gendered social norms and realize, uphold and practice the importance of nutritious meals for all human beings irrespective of their gender identity.
3. Affordability of nutritious meals for women and girls need to be tackled as a root cause. By improving the economic power of women and girls in families and communities, chances are that their affordability for full meals is improved.
4. Programs designed to address gender norms in nutritional access are critical and these have to be at every microcosm - workplaces, homes, communities, institutions - to reach every woman, every child.