The World Health Organization (WHO) states that only 3% of children aged 6–23 months in Kenya's food-insecure areas receive adequate nutrition. These figures highlight a major nutrition gap despite national progress in reducing stunting over 30 years. Significant disparities across counties and wealth groups persist.
The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that just 3% of children aged 6–23 months in Kenya's severely food-insecure areas receive sufficient nutrition. Nationally, 31% of children in this group fall below acceptable dietary standards, with only 37% consuming diverse foods.
The national stunting rate has dropped to 18% from 40% in 1993. Yet county variations remain stark: Kilifi at 37%, West Pokot at 34%, and Samburu at 31%, compared to about 9% in Kisumu and Garissa. These gaps now exceed differences between Kenya and some wealthier nations.
SUN CSA CEO Edgar Okoth cautioned against complacency with these gains. "While the decline in stunting is commendable, it cannot be reversed once it occurs," Okoth said, urging complete elimination rather than mere reduction.
Stunting affects 28% of children in the lowest wealth quintile versus 9% in the highest, and 22% of those whose mothers lack formal education compared to 9% for mothers with secondary education or more. In 2025, the Ministry of Health, with WHO support, developed a national guideline to prevent and manage acute malnutrition and trained health workers.